Tag Archives: history

Event: Film Showing – Love in the Time of the Frontier

*** Apologies for Cross Posting ***

Film showing | UCL Anthropology Department

Love in the Time of the Frontier
Three short films on migrations, detentions and expulsions across the Mediterranean

by Alexandra D’Onofrio
produced by FortressEurope
http://fortresseurope.blogspot.it/

Wednesday 16th May
5-7pm
UCL Anthropology Department
Daryll Forde Seminar Room

Three short films that trace the lives of Kabbour, Nizar and Abderrahim and their encounters with the North Africa/Europe border, Italian immigration centres and expulsion procedures, but also with love, paternity and solitude.

Love in the time of the Frontier (20 minutes)
Luck will save me (18 minutes)
Daddy’s not coming back (15 minutes)

(Arabic, Italian, English and French, with English subtitles)

The films will be followed by discussion with the director, Alexandra D’Onofrio, and the producer, Gabriele Del Grande

All welcome!

for information: a.elliot@ucl.ac.uk

Film Showing

Film Showing

Midland History Journal – Ethnic Community Histories in the Midlands

Midland History Journal

Midland History Journal

The Midland History Journal has recently published a new special issue volume entitled `Ethnic Community Histories in the Midlands.’  This volume includes a number of papers in relation to the history and development of ethnic communities within the English Midlands, namely the counties of Bedfordshire, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Rutland, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire.

Further details are as follows:

Midland History Journal
Volume 36, Number 2, Autumn 2011
Ethnic Community Histories in the Midlands.
http://maney.co.uk/index.php/journals/mdh/

Introduction: Ethnic Community Histories in the Midlands
pp. 143-148(6)
Authors: Dick, Malcolm; Dudrah, Rajinder

Birmingham Stories: Local Histories of Migration and Settlement and the Practice of History
pp. 149-162(14)
Authors: Myers, Kevin; Grosvenor, Ian

‘The Anarchy of Empire’: Reimagining Birmingham’s Civic Gospel
pp. 163-179(17)
Author: Green, Andy

The Black Presence in the West Midlands, 1650-1918
pp. 180-194(15)
Author: Callaghan, D.I.

Birmingham Anglo-Jewry c. 1780 to c. 1880: Origins, Experiences and Representations
pp. 195-214(20)
Author: Dick, Malcolm

Legacy of Partition, 1947-2009: Creating New Archives from the Memories of Leicestershire People
pp. 215-224(10)
Authors: Bonney, Richard; Hyde, Colin; Martin, John

‘Coventry Irish’: Community, Class, Culture and Narrative in the Formation of a Migrant Identity, 1940-1970
pp. 225-244(20)
Author: Ewart, Henrietta

The Cultural Currency of Afro-Caribbeans in Northamptonshire c. 1960-1990
pp. 245-261(17)
Author: Watley, George

Representing Race and Place: Black Midlanders on Television in the 1960s and 1970s
pp. 262-277(16)
Author: Long, Paul

British Bhangra Music as Soundscapes of the Midlands
pp. 278-291(14)
Author: Dudrah, Rajinder

Remembering the Alum Rock Road: Reputational Geographies and Spatial Biographies
pp. 292-309(18)
Authors: Parker, David; Karner, Christian

(Source : Maney Publishing – http://maney.co.uk/index.php/journals/mdh/)

Refugee Council Publish Short Film

Ram Gidoomal passport

Ram Gidoomal passport. Copyright - Refugee Council.

The Refugee Council has just published a new short film charting its own history in responding to refugee protection issues since 1951.  The film, “Protecting refugees: 60 years and beyond”, has been released to mark Human Rights Day which was on Saturday 10 December, and it also represents the culmination of the Refugee Council’s 60th anniversery celebrations in 2011.

The Refugee Council state that the film, “Protecting refugees: 60 years and beyond”, “features the testimonies and thoughts of refugees who fled conflicts around the world and rebuilt their lives in the UK, in each decade since 1951 – the year the charity came together to offer support and advice to refugees. With British actress Zoe Wanamaker narrating, the film features:

  • Bob Vertes, who arrived from Hungary in 1956
  • Ram Gidoomal, who arrived from Kenya in 1967
  • Pablo Aguirre, who arrived from Chile in 1976
  • Nyeya Yen, who arrived from Ghana in 1984
  • Nora Lupki, who arrived from Kosovo 1991
  • Rose Bazzie, who arrived from Liberia in 2004″
Rose with pic

Rose with pic. Copyright - Refugee Council.

To watch the film, visit the Refugee Council’s Youtube Channel. The film was directed by filmmaker Martin Scanlan and produced by Inside Job Productions.

Further information can be found on the Refugee Council’s press release – Refugee Council launches film celebrating protection of refugees since 1951.

Jewish Londoners Conference

When:           Sunday 15 February 2009
Where:          London Metropolitan Archives, 40, Northampton Road, London, EC1R 0HB
Time: 10am-4.30pm
Cost:           £30 / £20 (including lunch)
Booking:        Call on 020 7332 3851 or email ask.lma@cityoflondon.gov.uk

PROGRAMME

10  am          Arrival, Registration and Welcome

10.30 am Memory and The Jewish East End

Rachel Lichtenstein. Artist, archivist and writer, Rachel is the author of Rodinsky’s Whitechapel and co-author, with Iain Sinclair of Rodinsky’s Room. Her most recent publication is On Brick Lane, the first of a trilogy of books on London streets. This talk explores approaches to discovering and recording history through recollection.

11.15 am Responses to Mosley and the British Union of Fascists

David Rosenberg. David is a teacher and local historian who has done research on how different sectors of the Jewish community understood and responded to the threat posed by Mosley’s British Union of Fascists in the East End; how they helped defeat Mosley and what it revealed about the fault lines within the Jewish community of the 1930s.

12.15pm London Synagogues

Dr Sharman Kadish is Director of Jewish Heritage UK and AHRC Research Fellow and Part-time Lecturer in the Centre for Jewish Studies at the University of Manchester. She has written several books and numerous articles on Anglo-Jewish history and heritage, including Jewish Heritage in England: An Architectural Guide , published by English Heritage in 2006.

1pm Lunch (includes behind the scenes tour and a look at some original documents and a chance to view a reminiscence film )

2.30pm The Jewish Community and Freemasonry

Susan Snell is Archivist and Records Manager at the Library and Museum of Freemasonry. This talk explores the Jewish community in Freemasonry, with particular reference to the Jewish community in Jamaica and its interchange with Hoxton and other areas in London.

3.15 pm Benjamin Disraeli

Helen Langley. Helen is Head of Modern Political Papers in the Bodleian Library and the editor of Benjamin Disraeli: Scenes From an Extraordinary Life. This presentation will explore aspects of his life with consideration given to his being compelled to convert from the Jewish faith to Christianity at age 13, his London associations and his youthful visits to the Middle East.

4pm Tea and close