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A song for Cesar : the music and the movement / a Song for Cesar, LLC production ; produced & directed by Andres Alegria and Abel Sanchez.
Van Pelt - Video Collection (ask at Circulation Desk) DVD 035 987
Available
- Format:
- Video
- Language:
- English
- Spanish
- Subjects (All):
- Chavez, Cesar, 1927-1993.
- Chavez, Cesar.
- United Farm Workers.
- Labor leaders--United States.
- Labor leaders.
- Migrant agricultural laborers--Labor unions--United States.
- Migrant agricultural laborers.
- Mexican American migrant agricultural laborers.
- Agricultural laborers--United States--Songs and music.
- Agricultural laborers.
- Migrant agricultural laborers--Labor unions.
- United States.
- Genre:
- Documentary films.
- Feature films.
- Nonfiction films.
- Physical Description:
- 1 videodisc (85 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in.
- burning
- Place of Publication:
- [San Francisco] : Video Project, [2022]
- Language Note:
- English dialogue; Spanish subtitles; closed-captioned in English for the hearing impaired.
- System Details:
- DVD-R, NTSC, all regions; widescreen (1.85:1) presentation; stereo.
- digital
- optical
- stereo
- NTSC
- video file
- DVD video
- all regions
- Summary:
- In the 1960s and '70s, Cesar Chavez and farmworker activists allied with musicians and artists to help build a movement called "La Causa". A Song for Cesar tells the story of that alliance using first-person accounts of artists, musicians, members of Chavez's family, and other key figures of the movement. Inspired by the spirit of the thousands of farmworkers who struggled for justice alongside labor leaders Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta, and Larry Itliong, musicians Abel Sanchez and Jorge Santana's encapsulating tribute song bookends the film, highlighting how music and the arts were essential in building the farmworkers' movement Five studio recording sessions comprise the backbone of the film wherein the songs are also given historical and cultural context from the original artists that further anchor their place in the movement. These powerful songs serve as an artistic response to the social conditions that defined the reality of the farmworkers. Pairing rare archival footage with a wealth of prominent interviewees, we bare witness to anecdotes such as ones about Chavez's early life and work in the fields, the inception of the United Farm Workers union, the emergence of Chicano art, the role of theater in the struggle, and nonviolent action and art as a response to state and corporate violence. All of these elements form the legacy of a movement that joined social struggle and culture at the hip
- Notes:
- Originally produced in 2021.
- Special features: 35 interview excerpts.
- OCLC:
- 1335179378
- Publisher Number:
- ASC-2011 Video Project
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