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Women in the Curriculum / Women's Studies


WIC/WRC Videos G-J

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Gabriel Women: Passamaquoddy Basketmakers
One of the most accomplished and giving basketmakers of the Waponahki peoples, Mary Gabriel was born in the Passamaquoddy Township of Princeton, Maine, in 1908. She was honored as a National Heritage fellow in 1994. Here she tells her inspiring story of learning the centuries-old tradition from her grandmother and of passing it on to her daughters, Sylvia and Clare. Also included are Theresa Hoffman, executive director of the Maine basketmakers Alliance; Joseph Nichols, curator of the Waponahki Museum in Pleasant Point, Maine; and Kathleen Mundell, traditional and community arts associate of the Maine Arts Commission. (28 min. 1999)

Gender and Importance of Distinguishing Among Types of Partner Violence
Howard Schonberger Peace and Social Justice Memorial Lecture given by Michael Johnson, Associate Head of the Department of Sociology and Associate Professor of Sociology, Women's Studies and African-American Studies at Pennsylvania State University. The lecture highlights Domestic Violence Awareness Month and the Women in the Curriculum and Women's Studies Program's new research collaborative on violence against women.

The Gender Chip Project
What is it like to be a young woman training in college for a career in the high stakes professions of science, math, engineering and technology? In 1998 filmmaker Helen De Michiel brought together several young women majoring in the sciences, engineering and math at Ohio State University in Columbus. They agreed to meet regularly over their next three years of college and create a community to share experiences and struggles as women stepping into traditionally male domains. This DVD reveals how women are finding new ways to honor their own growth, motivations and experiences a they imagine how to make the science and technology workplace a comfortable environment for women to stay in and influence - for the better of everyone. 2005, Color/Stereo, 54 Minutes, DVD format.

Gender Equity and the Time Crunch: At Home and at Work
Stephanie Seguino, Assistant Professor of Economics, presents the issue of societal gender inequity as a complex problem, centered primarily in the uneven gender division of labor and resources that is difficult to ameliorate. She presents the key obstructions to gender equality, and posits concrete solutions for achieving real change. (1993)

The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal Legacy Revisited
*THIS VIDEO IS CURRENTLY MISSING FROM OUR COLLECTION*
Guest speaker Allan Johnson. A WIC/WST Fall 2004 Lunch Series Presentation on 10/27/04.

Gendering the Product: Women and the Visual Arts
This documentary deals with women and design, particularly product design. It looks at the way designers have commonly regarded women when creating domestic products and whether there is such thing as a feminine or feminist design. Gendering of products can often be seen in the way the product looks, the way in which its use is perceived, or in the more complex social relations that surround the product. Also considered is the role women have played as product designers and whether their growing involvement has altered the products that are designed. (24 min.)

Gender, Schooling, and Forced Migration: Stories From Somali Women in the Dedaab Refugee Camp.
Patti Buck, Assistant Professor of Education, Bates College. Part of the 2007 WIC Lunch Series. 9-25-07. VHS and DVD format available.

Generations of Struggle: Gender, Race and Trade Unions in 20th Century South Africa
Iris Berger, Professor of African History at SUNY at Albany, explores the life histories of South African women from different generations and different racial backgrounds. Highlighted are the role played by South African women in labor activism, their relationships with one another across racial lines, and the changing construction of gender issues from the 1930s to the present. (80 min. 1992)

Gentle Warrior for Peace: Tribute to Rita Joe,
Mi'kmaq-Canadian Poet Laureate, 1932-2007
Miigam'agan, Member of the Mi'kmaq Nation, Phyllis Brazee, Director of the Peace Studies Program, and Paul Deagle, English Teacher at Skowhegan Area High School. Part of Canada Week. Organized by John Maddaus, Associate Professor of Education. Part of the Fall 2007 Women in the Curriculum Lunch Series. November 7, 2007. DVD and VHS format available.

Girl from Hunan
At the turn of the century, a lively, twelve year-old girl is whisked off to a remote village and straight into an arranged marriage with a two year-old boy. As she grows into womanhood, she develops a sisterly affection for her toddling husband, but finds more substantial companionship in a furtive love affair with a young farmer -- which places her in danger from the village's severe restrictions against adultery. This video provides an example of the vigor and maturity of the New Chinese Cinema. Mandarin with English subtitles. (99 min. 1986)

Girls and Math
A McNeil-Lehrer News Hour, that focuses on an all-girls math class at Presque Isle High School. This segment shows the advantages to and arguments for having a single sex classroom. (58 min. 1987)

Girls Can!
This short film asks girls of various ages the question of "what you want to be when you grow up", as a means of building up and sustaining their self-esteem at a time when societal and peer pressures frequently lead to a loss of self-confidence. (16 min. 1994)

Girls in the Middle: Working to Succeed in School
This video accompanies the book of the same name. The third of three reports in the American Association of University Women Educational Foundation's research series on what is working for girls in school. Takes a very individual look at girls who differ in race, ethnicity, and demography. Also broadens the definition of girls' success by considering a range of successes- academic, social, artistic, and athletic. (26 min. 1996)

Girls Like Us
An ethnically diverse group of four working class girls strut, flirt, and testify in this vibrant, affecting portrait of teenage girls' experiences of sexuality. Filmed in South Philadelphia and following its subjects from the ages of 14 to 18, Girls Like Us reveals the conflicts of Growing up female by examining the impact of class, sexism, and violence on the dreams of young girls. A film by Jane C. Wagner and Tina DiFeliciantonio, 1997, 57 minutes.

Girls Will Be Girls? Aggression, Sexuality and Body Image
Are girls becoming too aggressive, too mean, too sexual, too much? Are they dressing too provocatively, bullying and fighting too often, living too dangerously? The contradictory realities of girls' lives challenge us to think in more complex ways. Experts describe the impact of socialization on girls' lives and offer practical advice to help girls respond to narrow cultural messages about body, sexuality, desire, anger and aggression. Interspersed with the voices of girls themselves, conference speakers encourage adults to help girls understand the culture in which they are immersed, and to join them in creating strategies that offer girls legitimate avenues to power and possibility. funded by the AAUW Educational Foundation, this conference features Lyn Mikel Brown, Ed.D., a visiting scholar at the University of Maine. Generously donated by the Women's Resource Center. 57 minutes.

GLBT Rainbow Millenium
Candace Gingrich, Keynote Speaker. Sixth annual Northeastern Regional Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender student leadership conference, April 7-9, 2000 (approx. 60 min.)

The Glass Ceiling
An in-service program designed to facilitate discussion about how women are treated in the engineering profession. It helps examine the prejudices and misconceptions that are holding women back and undermining the competitiveness of organizations. Includes background materials, an implementation guide, overheads, and a computer program. (30 min. 1997)

The Global Assembly Line
Traveling from Tennessee to Mexico's Northern border, from Silicon Valley to the Philippines, the Global Assembly Line takes viewers inside our new global economy. A vivid portrayal of the lives of working women and men in the "free trade zones" of developing countries and North America, as US industries close their factories to search the globe for lower-wage workforces. We take a rare look at the people who are making the clothing we wear and the electronic goods we use - as well as the business decisions behind manufacturing - on the global assembly line. (32 min.)

The Globalization of Spirit vs. The Globalization of Selfishness:
Critical Contradictions of Advanced Capitalist Societies in the 21st Century

Howard Schonberger Peace and Social Justice Memorial Lecturer Rabbi Michael Lerner. Part of the Socialist/Marxist Lecture Series.

Goddess Remembered
Archaeologist and anthropologists are beginning to discover evidence of a widespread early civilization based primarily on human cooperation. Goddess Remembered reveals these forgotten cultures - taking us to the Paleolithic caves of France, the Neolithic subterranean temples of Malta, the mysterious earthworks of ancient Britain, and the sun-drenched palaces of Delphi and of Crete. (54 min. 1995)

Grace Metalious and Peyton Place
A New Hampshire Writers Special that discusses author/homemaker Grace Metalious, who wrote Peyton Place. The book speaks of the hypocrisy and history of the town of Peyton Place, New Hampshire. Metalious's story was the largest selling novel in history at the time. This film shows how Peyton Place led Metalious to fame and ruin. (30 min. 1994)

Grace Paley
Part of the Lannan Library Film Series. Grace Paley, born in 1922 in the Bronx, New York, is a poet and short story writer. Her three books of stories, The Little Disturbances of Man, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, and Later the Same Day, were published together in The Collected Stories. A feminist and an anti-war activist, Grace Paley reads three stories on this video. (60 min. 1996)

The Grassroots Fundraising Series
A set of two videos instructed by Kim Klein, internationally known trainer, fundraising consultant, and author of the book, Fundraising for Social Change. She informs nonprofit organizations about fundraising. (1995)

-Core Elements -- Series I
This video discusses the basics of fundraising, the role of the board, asking for money, and major gifts. (110 min.)

-Building a Base -- Series II
This video discusses direct mail, special events, and donor loyalty. (90 min.)

Grassroots Goes to the Polls: The Impact of Citizens' Initiatives on Maine's Lesbian and Gay Rights Movement
WIC Luncheon November 6, 2001 Speaker: Kim Simmons, Adjunct Professor, Sociology, University of Southern Maine and Ph.D. Candidate, Sociology, University of Minnesota.

The Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate: Jessica Tuchman Matthews
How serious is the "greenhouse effect" on global climate and the environment? Very, says Dr. Jessica Tuchman Matthews, a Ph. D., in biochemistry and biophysics. We are now facing the specter of the "greenhouse effect", the prospect of overloading the earth's atmosphere with gases released when industrial nations burn fossil fuels like coal and oil, and the Third World strips its forest to farm and burn firewood. In this program with Bill Moyers, she contemplates just how much the earth and the heavens can stand. Matthews suggests that advances in technologies and international cooperation are necessary if the world is to save itself from ecological disaster. (30 min. 1995)

Guts, Gumption and Go-Ahead: Annie Mae Hunt Remembers
The personal history of an extraordinary African American woman is told in her own words and illustrated with archival footage, stills and music. Actress Irma Hall portrays Annie Mae in a video that weaves a tale of intimate experiences with recollections of Annie Mae's grandmother and mother. Dramatically recounting memories from slavery to contemporary times, the story is both harsh and poignant, full of a rare spirit and joy and rich with the daily life experiences of black women. It is the story of the strengths, contributions and heartaches of one woman who can teach everyone a lesson about independence. (Color and B/W, 24 minutes, comes with discussion guide).

Gypsies of the Footlights
The 1996 Minsky Family lecture given by Joyce Antler, a faculty member in American Studies and Women's Studies at Brandeis. Antler discusses the personal and professional odysseys of Jewish women performers in American theatre. Her talk also portrays the rise of Yiddish influence in mainstream American theatre performances. Special emphasis is on Jewish actresses, including Sophie Tucker, Barbara Streisand, and Fannie Bryce. (90 min. 1996)

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Hand on the Pulse
Using interviews, photos and archival footage, Hand on the Pulse is the poignant story of Joan Nestle, political and sexual "bad girl." The documentary traces Joan's life; finding her community in Greenwich Village in the 1950's, celebrating the body in her writings, public readings in her black slip, having a lesbian archive in her home for 25 years, teaching students "from colonized backgrounds," participating in the Black civil rights movement as a freedom rider, becoming a feminist, and helping to forge a new lesbian and gay consciousness through grass roots organizing. Director: Joyce Warshow, 53 minutes, color, 2002.

Hard Work to Make Ends Meet: Narratives of Maine's Working Women, 1880-1900
This video is a readers' theater performance that brings the concerns of 19th-century working-class women to life. The performance is based on working women's writings that have been preserved in the Annual Reports of Maine's Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. These narratives are woven together with the 1888 report of Flora Haines, a state-employed factory inspector from Bangor. The performance also includes songs and poetry of this era. Written by Carol Toner (University of Maine). Adapted for the stage and directed by Lauren Bruce (University of Alaska). (30 min. 1997)

Harpsichord Music by Women Composers of the 18th Century
A doctoral candidate in Musical Arts in Historical Performance at Boston University, Marina Minkin's performances have won awards in the United States and Europe. This lecture performance features works of Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre, Marianne de Martinez, Anna Lucia Bon, and Maria Theresa Agnesi. (90 min. 1997)

Hazard Communication
"Your Class is Waiting" This program shows how schools can be as hazardous as industries and discusses ways in which we can keep children and staff safer with just a few simple precautions.

The Healing Years
A documentary about surviving incest and child sexual abuse. The Healing Years profiles three women through their journey of pain and despair from incest, and their incredible process of recovery as they finally work to end the cycle of incest and child sexual abuse for generations ahead. Featuring former Miss America Marilyn Van Derbur and her nation-wide work as survivor activist; Janice Mirikitani, President of San Francisco's renowned Glide Memorial Church, and Barbara Hamilton, a 79-year old survivor ending three generations of incest in her family, this film is artfully produced. The film illustrates these poignant and powerful stories through interviews, intimate moments with supportive family members, counseling groups, footage of their work as activists and home film footage. (52 min. 1999)

Hearts and Hands
A dramatic presentation of a vital part of American history only now beginning to be told. The video examines the role played by women and their textiles in the nineteenth century's great moments and events: industrialization, the abolition of slavery, women's rights, the Civil War, westward expansion and the pioneer experience, temperance, and suffrage. The film and its companion book explore the astonishing lives and accomplishments of ordinary, often anonymous women as well as chronicling the lives of extraordinary individuals such as Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Keckley, Frances Willard and Abigail Scott Dunway. "Hearts and Hands" shows how women made quilts whose beauty far outshone their utilitarian functions and how women used the needle to find their own voices. (58 min. 1987)

Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl
The characters in this program are based on the lives of young working women's turn-of-the-century New York City. Their words are taken solely from interviews, memoirs, newspaper accounts, and other historical documents. (26 min. 1993)

The Heidi Chronicles
An original adaptation of Wendy Wasserstein's Pulitzer Prize winning play about one woman's quest for fulfillment. Jamie Lee Curtis stars as Heidi Holland, an idealist member of the babyboom generation navigating her way through the excitement and turmoil of the 1960s, 70s, 80s and 90s. (94 min. 1995)

Hell to Pay
A moving and politically sophisticated analysis of the international debt situation through the eyes of the women of Bolivia, the poorest country in Latin America. Although most directly affected by government austerity programs, peasant women are assumed not to understand the workings of international capital and foreign policy. Hell to Pay poignantly contradicts such assumptions as teachers, textile workers, and miner's wives speak vividly of the causes of the debt crisis and the burden they are forced to bear. (52 min. 1998)

Her Mother before Her: American Indian Women's Stories of Their Mothers & Grandmothers
Celebrating generations, including a newborn granddaughter. Traditional songs sung by Rebecca Greendeer and Irene Thundercloud. (22 min. 1992)

He Said, She Said: Gender, Language, and Communication
Dr. Deborah Tannen is on the linguistics department faculty at Georgetown University, where she is one of only four who hold the distinguished rank of University Professor. He Said, She Said is Deborah Tannen's live video presentation of her seminal contributions to the understanding of gender, language, and communication. This program is produced, edited, and paced for curricular use in communication, linguistics, psychology, sociology, and other social sciences. (50 min. 2001)

Hidden Faces
The filmmaker, an Egyptian woman living in Paris, journeys to her family home and documents complex frictions between modernity and tradition in Cairo, as well as rural Egyptian communities. Hidden Faces contends with the contradictions of feminism in a Muslim environment and the profound attachments to traditional family life. (52 min. 1990)

High Energy: Physicist Melissa Franklin
To Melissa Franklin, building a machine that zaps subatomic particles is as much of a kick as staying up all night listening to Frank Zappa albums. She's an eclectic innovator with a quirky sense of humor and she's also the first woman to become a tenured professor in Harvard University's physics department. In this profile, Franklin brings the cameras inside the multi-million dollar, 140-ton particle detector at Chicago's Fermilab. The detector, which Franklin helped build, accelerates "the smallest things in the world," subatomic particles, and then smashes them together to produce data that physicists can record and study. Out of this research, Franklin and her colleagues have produced evidence of the top quark, the final elusive particle needed to complete the standard model of quantum physics. But a lack of support and frank apathy from the government act as a main obstacle between Melissa and her dream. Part of the PBS Discovering Women Series. (60 min. 1990)

Hildegard von Bingen In Portrait (Ordo Virtutum)
The Ritual of the Virtues is the oldest surviving European music-drama, and the greatest musical work by the visionary mystic, Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179). Hildegard left a treasury of writings and music expressing the passionate intensity of her mystical experiences. Her profound knowledge seemed to come directly from a source of wisdom deeper than learning and tradition, finding its expression through the symbolism of medieval Christendom. She tells us that the spirit and the world are not separate but intertwined, and that spirituality and worldliness do not have to be separate either. Although she lived almost her entire life as a cloistered nun, she was deeply involved with the world on many levels - observing, writing, preaching and organizing a community. Through her many writings, she tells us that help is always at hand, both from the world we know with our senses, and from the world we discover through our hearts and intuition. (2003, 70 minutes)

Hillary's Class
A PBS Frontline special that discusses the journey of Wellesley's graduating class of 1969, the same year Hillary Rodham graduated. Nineteen sixty-nine was also a year of profound social change and upheaval for women. This special shows the opportunities that were available for the women of Wellesley as well as the choices that the women of the class of 1969 made. (60 min. 1994)

The Home and the World
India's greatest filmmaker, Satyajit Ray, directs this deeply moving and provocative film. A beautiful and sheltered Bengali woman's love is tested when her husband Nikhil invites his boyhood friend Sandip to stay at his home while organizing a boycott of British goods. Much to Nikhil's dismay, she not only falls in love with him, but also joins his quest for political justice. Based on the novel by Nobel Prize winner Rabindranath Tagore. Bengali, with English subtitles. (130 min. 1984)

How Do We Talk About Families? Myths and Changing Realities
Part of the 13th Annual Maine Women's Studies Conference. The speaker was Stephanie Coontz, social historian and author of The Way We Never Were and The Nostalgia Trap. (75 min. 1998)

How to Make 'Em Laugh
This video gives an introduction to comic characterization, by showing demonstrations of techniques. This video is written and directed by Sandra Hardy. One of the main performers is Margaret Anich, who discusses how she comes across the characters she plays. (50 min.)

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I Always Do My Collars First (a film about ironing)
A documentary that delivers an artful and unexpectedly entertaining look at what is often ignored as a mundane chore. It's a film about ironing, but it's also a meaningful meditation on so much more. The story follows four dynamic Cajun women in French Louisiana as they go about their daily lives demonstrating how the simple ritual of ironing weaves its way throughout the fabric of family life and their sense of identity. Ironing, we learn from them, is a nurturing, emotional, and learned process, transmitted from mothers to daughters; it is performed with complex aesthetic sensibilities that connect these women to other women in their community. Through first-person narration, the women share with us a rare look at the rich interior life lived by wives and mothers in a traditional culture. By the film's end, we see that for them, and for their mothers, ironing has been as necessary to self respect as cooking is to eating. (English w/ French Subtitles, 24 minutes, DVD)

I is a Long-Memoried Woman
This striking combination of monologue, dance and song chronicles the history of slavery through the eyes of Caribbean women. Based on the award-winning poems of Guyanese-British writer Grace Nichols, this performance piece describes the conditions of slavery on sugar plantations, as well as acts of defiance and rebellion that led to freedom, read by author Toni Morrison. (50 min. 1990)

I Read About My Death In Vogue Magazine:
A Comedy by Lydia Sargent

A feminist comedy telling of the events leading up to that fateful day when 1960's feminist read about the death of feminism in various mainstream women's magazines, and elsewhere. The Boston Phoenix called it a "rich and funny wake and sing for the post-feminist ge." Filmed live performance at ZMI, 2001; includes soundtrack; 105 minutes.

Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice
This film looks at the life of this civil rights activist's career as a journalist and her work as an anti-lynching crusader. African-American author Toni Morrison reads passages from Wells' journal as well as letters Wells wrote. (54 min.)

Ideal Femininity Changes Color: J Lo as the New Superwoman
Lisa Flores, Director of the Center for Critical Race Studies, University of Utah. Part of the Fall 2007 WIC Lunch Series. Filmed on October 16, 2007. DVD and VHS format available.

An Identity of My Own: In Search of the Elusive Franco American
An on-campus lecture given by Eloise Briere, Associate Professor of French Studies, University at Albany, SUNY and expert on Franco-American Studies and the French presence in the Caribbean and Africa. Part of the Multicultural Women's Studies Institute. (90 min. 1998)

If These Walls Could Talk
An HBO original movie staring Demi Moore, Sissy Spacek, and Cher. Movie looks at three different generations of women trying to have abortions, from when they were illegal to today's legalization.

If These Walls Could Talk 2
Three couples over three different decades are bonded by the depth of their passions, their unconventional love, and a house that might offer up their stories. (96 min. 2000)

Illusions
A black and white film written and directed by Julie Dash, set during World War II, that depicts the mistreatment of a black woman who sings the voiceover for a Hollywood movie that features only whites. (34 min. 1982)

Images of Women and Nature
An on-campus lecture by Carolyn Merchant, the author of The Death of Nature and Ecological Revolutions and a professor of environmental history at the University of California at Berkeley, explores the intrinsic connections between women and nature as seen through imagery. She also discusses the linkages between this imagery and the evolution of the eco-feminist movement in the 1960s. (90 min. 1992)

In Depth
Deborah Tannen: In Depth is the companion video to He Said, She Said. In this additional 25-minute presentation, sit down with Deborah Tannen as she goes In-Depth, addressing key issues, implications, and criticisms about He Said, She Said, including: The nature/nurture question: are conversational styles born or made? Is gender the most important factor affecting conversational interaction? Are these patterns cross-cultural? What about power and dominance? How are linguistic and psychological approaches different? And much more! (25 minutes, 2001, VHS)

In My Own Skin: The Complexity of Living as an Arab in America
In My Own Skin is a meditation on the complexities of the Arab American experience through candid interviews with five young Arab women living in New York in October 2001. Made in the weeks following the tragic attacks on the WTC, In My Own Skin is a short but powerful documentary that speaks to a wide variety of audiences about the issues of immigration, identity, religion, culture, and loyalty in the shadow of 9-11. A film by Nikki Byrd and Jennifer Jajeh. (16 minutes, 2001)

In Women's Hands: A Film on Women, HIV, and Hope
For well over a decade, HIV has quietly but steadily claimed women's lives. Today, nearly 50% of all people living with HIV/AIDS are women. According to the United Nations, globally, young women and girls are more susceptible to HIV than men and boys, with studies showing they can be 2.5 times more likely to be HIV-infected as their male counterparts. Their vulnerability is primarily due to inadequate knowledge about AIDS, insufficient access to HIV prevention services, inability to negotiate safer sex, and a need for more female-initiated HIV prevention methods, such as microbicides. Filmed in several locations across the world, this short documentary is an important tool for organizing and creating awareness around the increasing rates of HIV/STD among women and the importance of advocacy for microbicides. The personal stories portrayed in this documentary speak to the need for microbicides and the importance of leadership on this issue and provide an inspiration for action. (2005, 26 minutes, DVD Format)

In Search of Femininities and Masculinities among New England Industrial Workers
An on-campus lecture by Professor Mary Bluett as part of Women' s History Celebration. Bluett, a professor of History at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, uses tools developed in women's history to look at how gender roles were constructed among male and female industrial workers in New England. (75 min. 1994)

In the Mirror of Maya Deren
Filmmaker Martina Kudlacek has fashioned not only a fascinating portrait of a groundbreaking and influential artist, but a pitch-perfect introduction to her strikingly beautiful and poetic body of work. Maya Deren is arguably the most important and innovative avant-garde filmmaker in the history of American cinema. Using locations from the Hollywood hills to Haiti, Deren made such mesmerizing films as AT LAND, RITUAL IN TRANSFIGURED TIME, and her masterpiece, MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON throughout the 1940s and 50s. This video seamlessly and effectively interweaves archival footage with observances from acolytes and contemporaries such as filmmakers Stan Brakhage and Jonas Mekas, dance pioneer Katherine Dunham, and Living Theater founder Judith Malina. With an original score by experimental New York composer John Zorn. (104 min. 2002)

Including Women in the Science Curriculum
An on-campus lecture by Dr. Sue Rosser, a zoologist and director of Women's Studies at the University of South Carolina, provides information and teaching techniques on how to attract women to the sciences. (75 min. 1992)

Indigenous Holy Lands and Sustainability in North America
Winona LaDuke, guest speaker. 2005 Howard B. Schonberger Peace and Social Justice Memorial Lecture. 12/06/05

Influences of the Invisible
Shot in South India, Influences of the Invisible explores the significance of mythology and tradition in the collective psyche of women in India. It examines the fusion of visible realities and conceptual ideals. Interwoven with casual interviews and candid observations, Influences of the Invisible provides a cultural perspective of women and their issues and context in modern India. (29 min. 1997)

Integrating American Women's History: Avoiding Race and Sex Segregation
An on-campus lecture by Jacqueline Jones, a Professor of American Civilization at Brandeis University. Jones, the author of Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow: Black Women, Work and the Family from Slavery to the Present, among other works, discusses recent works in American historiography and how these works contribute to a curriculum transformation that allows for a more inclusive historical canon. (75 min. 1993)

Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the KinderTransport
This Academy Award-winning documentary (produced with the cooperation of the United States Holocaust Museum) chronicles one of the lesser-known stories of the Holocaust: that of the KinderTransport, which saved the lives of 10,000 Jewish children. IN the late 1930s, England agreed to accept these children seeking refuge from Nazi oppression. They were placed in foster homes and hostels. Narrated by Dame Judi Dench and directed by Mark Jonathan Harris (who received an Oscar for his 1997 Holocaust documentary The Long Way Home), this devastating and deeply moving film bears witness to the kindness of these "simply wonderful people" and to the resilience of the kinder, now elderly, who recall in haunting stories the unimaginable grief of being suddenly torn from their parents, the trauma of not knowing whether they would ever see them again, and the difficulties some faced in their new homes.

Into The Woods: Maine Women Workers Now and in the Past
Spring 2005 WIC/WST Lunch Series with Vivianne Holmes, Julia Hunter and Pauleena MacDougall. 3-15-05.

Iranian Journey
Massoumeh Soltan Baloghie is the first woman long-distance bus driver in Iran and perhaps in the Islamic world. Iraqi filmmaker Maysoon Pachachi joins this extraordinary woman on her 22-hour, 5,000-kilometer trip from Tehran to Bandar Abbas, talking with her passengers , her family and people en route to learn more about her remarkable story. These casual conversations strikingly reveal the overwhelming sense of expectation Iranians express about the possibility of change in their country, and the relationship between traditional and modern life, city and country side, sacred and secular. A gentle and richly textured documentary, Iranian Journey thoughtfully explores the lives and roles of women at a time of transition,. A film by Maysoon Pachachi, 1999, 54 minutes.

Irezumi (Spirit of Tattoo)
Urged by her lover to experience the art of tattooing (or, to be more accurate, of being tattooed), a Japanese woman has her back "decorated". This becomes part of "an experience of sensual awakening and liberation, the pleasure and pain of transformation, a mystery of obsession." In Japanese with English subtitles. (88 min. 1983)

Iroquois Corn in a Culture-Based Curriculum: A Framework for Teaching about Cultures Respectfully
An on-campus lecture by Carol Cornelius, Area Manager of the Oneida Cultural Heritage Center and former director of the American Indian Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Part of the Multicultural Women's Studies Institute. (90 min. 1998)

Is Feminism Dead?
Years after the women's movement burst open doors of opportunity that had long been barred, a new generation of women seems to be questioning the meaning and the value of the battles fought by their mothers and grandmothers. Has feminism somehow gone out of style? In this program Patricia Ireland, of Now; Phyllis Schlafly, of the Eagle Forum; Ellen Goodman, of the Boson Glob; Dr. Bell Hooks, of CUNY's English Department; Dr. Tessie Liu, of Northwestern University's History and Gender Identity Departments; and Dr. Marhta Wharton, of Ohio State University's Departments of African-American Studies and Women's Studies, appraise the women's movement as it currently exists and discuss its relevance in today's cultural climate. (29 min. 2000)

Is that Your Mom? A Qualitative Investigation of White Mothers and Nonwhite Children
WIC/WST Spring 2004 Lunch Series with Tracy L. Robinson. 4-21-04.

Islamic Conversations: Women and Islam
Leila Ahmed, Professor of Women's Studies at Amherst College, argues the case for revision of the widely held views in the Islamic world about the role of women, using examples from history and the role played by women in the contemporary world. She explains the origin of the veil and discusses the issue of marriage and women's rights within marriage. (30 min. 1994)

Issues for Women Composers in North America
WIC Luncheon lecture presented by Luisa Vilar, Dean of Arts, Universidad de las Americas, Mexico, Laura Artesani, Assistant Professor of Women's Studies and Music Coordinator for the School of Performing Arts, Ginger Hwalek, Instructor in Music, and Beth Wiemann, Assistant Professor of Music. (2002)

"It's the People Who are Under the Heel Who Have to Lead":
Ella Baker and Working Class Black Leadership in the Civil Rights Movement. Barbara Ransby, WIC Lunch Series, 2/19/04.

I've Known Rivers
Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot as part of the Harvard Educational Forum. Lightfoot discusses I've Known Rivers, her book about race, culture, family, and religion. (75 min. 1994)

J

Japan
Jane Seymour examines how Japan's ancient traditions have blended with new technology and modern trends to shape the society and its people today in this four-volume documentary series. (each tape 60 min. 1987)

Vol. 1 -- The Electronic Tribe This segment focuses on the contrasts between the present-day life of factory workers and the inherited religious and rural customs still found in the ordinary home. Traditional ceremonies, including the bathing ritual, village festivals and more are in the first episode of this fascinating series.

Vol. 2 -- The Sword and the Chrysanthemum The second installment of this series examines the influence of the Samurai, as both warriors and lovers of high culture, on Japanese life, past and present. Much of the warrior history is still a part of everyday life in Japan, from the rock gardens and tea ceremonies to the violence of Japan's popular culture in comic books and television programs.

Vol. 3 -- The Legacy of the Shogun The 17th century Shogun philosophy of hard work, discipline and hierarchy continues to affect the culture and social mores of contemporary Japan. The program reflects on the rapid acceleration of industry and technology in the country, industry that was nonexistent fifty years ago and is fueled by the Shogun philosophy.

Vol. 4 -- A Proper Place in the World The final episode in this series looks at Japan's intervention on the world's stage during the 20th century and its future as a world economic superpower. The desire for economic growth in Japan has led its people to embrace the best of Western culture while preserving Japanese traditions. The role of women and their economic power is also explored.

Jewels in A Test Tube: Biochemist Lynda Jordan
As a teenager growing up in a dangerous, low-income housing project in Boston, Lynda Jordan was, as she puts it, "on the cusp of becoming a delinquent child." Today she's a tenured associate professor in biochemistry, working on an exciting project: unlocking the secrets of a key human enzyme that's vital to one of life most fundamental processes, giving birth. The inspiring story of Jordan's journey toward that goal and of her efforts to encourage the next generation of African American scientists like herself, is at the heart of this profile. Her contribution to science is not only developing new discoveries in biochemistry, but also developing new African-American biochemists. Jordan talks about the importance of her undergraduate years at a historically black university. Jordan stated the university was a place where she could feel "strong, enforced, affirmed" in her identity as an African American women while learning the skills needed to go on to a Ph.D. from MIT and a fellowship at the prestigious Institut Pasteur in Paris. Part of the PBS Discovering Women Series (60 min. 1995)

Journey Into Courage
In this film six courageous Vermont women tell their stories of surmounting the domestic violence and sexual abuse in their lives. (65 min. 1995)

Journey Into Hope: Multi-Cultural Perspectives On Domestic Violence
In this film you will witness seven women and six men who speak from their hearts and represent various perspectives. Compassionate voices show the relationship between domestic violence, racism, and homophobia and how they affect individual lives. Despite the overwhelming majority of victims being female, many of the speakers in the film refer to the batterer as he or she to decrease the isolation of men wo are abused by women as well. (2000)

Joy Harjo
Part of the Lannan Library Film Series. Joy Harjo, born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1951, is an enrolled member of the Muscogee Tribe. She read from The Woman Who Fell from the Sky, Secrets from the Center of the World, In Mad Love and War, and She Had Some Horses. (60 min. 1996)

Joy Harjo
This is a different video than the one listed above. Part of the Lannan Library Film Series. Joy Harjo, a member of the Muscogee (Creek) nation, draws on the history, mythology, and contemporary problems of Native Americans for her visionary poetry. Ms. Harjo read from She Had Some Horses and In Mad Love and War (which won an American Book Award). Poet Lewis MacAdams interviewed Joy Harjo, which is also documented on this video. (60 min. 1989)

Ju-Dou
Acclaimed throughout the world, this Chinese variation on The Postman Always Rings Twice almost didn't come to the screen at all. Chinese governmental efforts to censor the film spurred Western filmmakers to speak out in support of this remarkable film. The story explores the love affair between a factory mill owner's battered bride and his overworked nephew, who turn to murder as a means of freeing themselves from his tyranny. Chinese, with English subtitles. (98 min. 1990)

June Jordan
The closing reading at the Fifteenth Annual Maine Women's Studies Conference at UMO, "Women Around the World: Bringing the Global Home." June Jordan was a professor of African American Studies at the University of California at Berkeley and also an honored poet. She reads from her recently published memoir, Soldier: A Poet's Childhood and from other of her works. (2000)


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Women in the Curriculum
Women's Studies
Program
101 Fernald Hall
University of Maine
Orono, ME 04469
Phone: 581-1228
E-mail: Angela.Hart@umit.maine.edu


The University of Maine
, Orono, Maine 04469
207-581-1110
A Member of the University of Maine System