Abstract

The visual medium has the potential to be a creative avenue for enhancing awareness, critical thought and social justice. Through the prism of collaborative filmmaking, academic-activists can enrich textual analyses while creating what Jacques Rancière calls a "sense of community" among participants. This article reflects on the process of co-producing an Indigenous youth-driven documentary film, Indian Givers, which is publicly available on YouTube. It discusses the applied practice of engaging in a collaborative process with the aim of countering Western models of knowledge. The film and this article each draw into focus the experiences and stories of Indigenous youth who live in a highly polluted place commonly referred to as Canada's "Chemical Valley." Informed by Chantal Mouffe's notion of agonism, I contend that collaborative filmmaking contributes to anti-oppressive and community engaged scholarship by facilitating intercultural dialogue, offering a reflexive and relational approach to research, co-creating knowledge and contributing to social action. This paper reflects on some of the challenges of collaborative filmmaking in order to contribute to academic-activist research. As an anti-oppressive research tool, collaborative filmmaking provides a forum for resistance to dominant colonial discourses while creating space for radical difference in pursuit of decolonization.

Details

Title
Decolonizing Engagement? Creating a Sense of Community through Collaborative Filmmaking
Author
Wiebe, Sarah Marie
Pages
n/a
Section
Thematic Articles
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Centre for Studies in Social Justice
e-ISSN
19114788
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1803182620
Copyright
Copyright Centre for Studies in Social Justice 2015