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They turned our desert into fire / directed by Mark Brecke ; produced by Jason Mitchell, Stacey Ransom, Mark Brecke, Global Contact Films and Purebred Productions Inc.

Academic Video Online: Premium - United States Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
White-Hammond, Gloria., Performer.
Test, Elissa.
Gagnon, Georgette., Performer.
Prendergast, John, 1963-
Lee, Barbara Jean.
Power, Samantha., Performer.
Mitchell, Jason (Producer), Producer.
Ransom, Stacey., Producer.
Brecke. Mark., Director, Producer.
Global Contact Films., Producer.
Purebred Productions Inc., Producer.
Series:
Academic Video Online
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Sudan--History--Darfur Conflict, 2003---Foreign public opinion, American.
Sudan.
Sudan--History--Darfur Conflict, 2003-.
Genre:
Documentary films.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (117 min.).
Place of Publication:
Watertown, MA : Documentary Educational Resources (DER), 2008.
Language Note:
This edition in English.
Summary:
Reporting the devastation, forced displacement, and genocide in Darfur should be a story with daily coverage. Mere mention of the word Darfur should set off a passionate exchange, or at least the question, What can be done? Unfortunately, the people of Darfur struggle with a problem common to so many victimized by geo-political realities how to overcome the willful indifference of powerful government and media interests who find their story unimportant or merely inconvenient. With images and first-hand accounts, filmmaker Mark Brecke shares his experience of the Darfur crisis with Amtrak train passengers journeying eastward on a three day trip to Washington D.C. Their reactions, interwoven with hard facts and expert opinion, raise the central question in They Turned Our Desert Into Fire - Why does the public not understand the severity of this crisis and how can the world continue to do nothing? In addition to the film and a slideshow of Brecke's photographs, this video also contains the short film War as a Second Language (27 min., 2002). Mark Brecke culled from 15 years of newsreels, documentaries, and raw footage of the Vietnam War to create an audio track which he then juxtaposed with moving and still images he shot in Vietnam and Cambodia in 1995. Tourists replace soldiers and the audio design becomes a haunting and evocative narrative about history and the legacies of war.
Notes:
Title from resource description page (viewed Feb. 6, 2014).
Recorded in 2003 in Darfur, Sudan and Washington, D.C.
OCLC:
877880499

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