Intersectionality in the American South
In this episode of Intersectionality in the American South, host Dr. Katie Acosta talks with award-winning filmmaker Michèle Stephenson at Georgia State’s Auburn Avenue Research Center. Michèle Stephenson shares her documentary film True North, which spotlights the 1968–69 Black Liberation Movement in Canada and the student occupation which occurred in what is now Concordia University. True North offers firsthand accounts and rare archival footage of Black student activism in a way that connects liberation movements in Canada and the United States. Michèle Stephenson shares Canada's history with several important themes in the documentary, including surveillance, deportations, and Canada’s denial of its own racism. She shares that the film intentionally centers Black women’s role in the movement because their voices had previously been silence. In all, True North builds an archive for future generations. Learn More about the True North [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt37816123/] documentary and about Michèle Stpehenson's other films by visiting Rada Studio [https://radastudio.squarespace.com/]. Follow us on instagram @intersectsouth or visit our website at https://sites.gsu.edu/intersectsouth/ [https://sites.gsu.edu/intersectsouth/]
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