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Documentary Attunements: From Voice to Audibility, Pooja Rangan; Sayonara CP (Goodbye CP) screening
2018-Feb-19 @ 17:00 - 19:00
FreeOn Film will present Documentary Attunements: From Voice to Audibility in the Humanities Center, Room D featuring a screening of Sayonara CP (Goodbye CP, Kazuo Hara, 1972, 82 min., 16mm) and a lecture by Pooja Rangan.
In the field of documentary, voice, rather than point of view, is the prevailing metaphor for a film's unique perspective, signaling the documentary genre's textual emphasis on spoken words, as well as its social ethic of "giving voice." Pooja Rangan's talk will unpack the humanitarian resonances of this metaphor, as elaborated in her book Immediations: The Humanitarian Impulse in Documentary (2017, Duke University Press). Rangan reframes voice as an audibility: a product of auditory forms and practices such as documentary that discipline unspoken norms of speaking and listening. Her talk places documentary depictions of autistic protagonists and call center agents in conversation, asking how the resonances among disability and postcoloniality might attune us to the complex mediations of difference involved in the production and reception of documentary voices.
The first film by director Kazuo Hara and producer Sachiko Kobayashi's Shisso Productions, Goodbye CP results from their pact with a group of activist men with cerebral palsy called the Kanagawa Green Grasses: they throw off all supports of society that render them invisible to rally in the streets of Tokyo against their mistreatment, and he keeps filming no matter what. A shy cameraman alienated by the collectivist politics of the 1960s student movement, Hara's first film created a model he'd follow for later canonical titles such as The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On (1987), following protagonists pushing through public/private boundaries and upending conventions of documentary ethics to challenge the buried violence of colonized subjectivities. In non-sync black and white, Goodbye CP accesses that political provocation in stark terms, questioning its own medium and the terms of solidarity it's built upon. Two outspoken disability rights activists, the poet Hiroshi Yokota and photographer Koichi Yokotsuka, challenge the status of the camera as object and documentary tool, and the human voice's dependence upon it.
[source: On Film website, 2018-Feb-12]