St. Maryโ€™s City, Md.ย – The department of theater, film, and media studies at St. Maryโ€™s College of Maryland will host its eleventh annual film series, โ€œVisions and Voices: Indigenous Media from the Americas,โ€ at 8:15 p.m. on Sept. 19, Sept. 24, Oct. 15, and Oct. 22. The series will take place in the Collegeโ€™s Cole Cinema, Campus Center, and will highlight the works of four award-winning filmmakers. The film series is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Mark Rhoda at marhoda@smcm.edu or 240-895-4231, or visit the TFMS website at www.smcm.edu/events/theater-film-and-media-studies-events/film-series-schedule/

About the film series:

This yearโ€™s series will foreground the diversity of Indigenous media from the Americas, including works from Canada (Anishinaabe, Michif, Algonquin, Cree) and Central/South America (Guatemala, Brazil, Peru, Argentina).ย  Works by filmmakers Neil Diamond (Cree) and Lisa Jackson (Anishinaabe) from Canada and Alvaro and Diego Sarmiento (Quechua) from Peru will highlight the series, with a special screening on Oct. 2 of Indian Himalayan ethnographer Stanzin Dorjaiโ€™s โ€œThe Shepherdess of the Glaciers.โ€

Media and cultural studies scholar Amalia Cรณrdova, digital curator of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage in Washington, D.C., will open the series with a presentation on the work of North and South American media-makers. Her talk will contextualize and underscore the range of global Indigenous media forms, including those that will constitute subsequent film series screenings: animation, feature-length documentary, fiction, and experimental.

Detailed schedule:

Monday, Sept. 17, at 8:15 p.m.: Presentation by Amalia Cรณrdova on Indigenous media practices and makers from both a local and global perspective. A Q&A follows the presentation.

Monday, Sept. 24, at 8:15 p.m.: Screening of โ€œReel Injun: On the Trail of the Hollywood Indianโ€ (2009) from one of Canadaโ€™s foremost Aboriginal filmmakers and photographers Neil Diamond. โ€œReel Injunโ€ deconstructs the mythology of โ€œthe Injunโ€ as Hollywood has determined it from the early days of silent film production. Diamondโ€™s film looks at how this myth of the โ€œreel Injun,โ€ durable as it is, has influenced and shaped our understandingโ€”and gross misapprehensionโ€”of Native peoples. A Q&A with director Diamond follows the screening.

Tuesday, Oct. 2, at 8:15 p.m.: Special screening of โ€œThe Shepherdess of the Glaciersโ€ (2016), Himalayan director Stanzin Dorjaiโ€™s beautifully photographed film of his sister Tseringโ€™s life as one of the last shepherdesses who still lives with her flocks of goats and sheep in the heights of the Gya-Miru valley in Ladakh, in the vast trans-Himalayan mountain desert in the northernmost part of India.ย  A harsh and precarious life, often solitary, mishandled by difficult climatic conditions and a sometimes-hostile nature, does not prevent Tsering from singing, laughing, and even philosophizing about her life and work. A Q&A with director Dorjai follows the screening.

Monday, Oct. 15, at 8:15 p.m.: Screening of a program of short films. With the participation of Anishinaabe filmmaker Lisa Jackson (animator/live-action, Canada), who shall lead the post-screening Q&A, this program of short films (lasting approximately 1.5 hours) will include animation and live-action experimental and fiction filmmaking. Films to be screened: โ€œSuckerfish,โ€ โ€œSavage,โ€ โ€œSnareโ€ [Jackson]; โ€œMia,โ€ โ€œFlood,โ€ โ€œIndigoโ€ [Amanda Strong, Michif, Canada]; โ€œMobilize,โ€ โ€œIkwe,โ€ โ€œCreatura Dadaโ€ [Caroline Monnet, Algonquin, Canada]; โ€œKat wajโ€ [Teresa Jimรฉnez, Ladino, Guatemala]; โ€œThe Maxakali Floodโ€ [Isael Maxacali and Charles Bicalho [Maxakali, Brazil]; โ€œThe Way is Longโ€ [Edgar Sajcabรบn, Guatemala]; and โ€œDoรฑa Ubenza,โ€ [Juan Manuel Costa, Argentina].

Monday, Oct. 22, at 8:15 p.m.: Screening of โ€œGreen River: The Time of the Yakurunasโ€ (2017) and โ€œSoniaโ€™s Dreamโ€ (2015) from Peruvian directors Alvaro and Diego Sarmiento. Guided by Ayahuasca chants, โ€œGreen Riverโ€ is a poetic journey into the depths of the Amazon. The film explores the perception of time in three small villages intertwined by the flowing waters of the Amazon river, immersing the viewer in a landscape inhabited by shamans and ancient societies that are in danger of disappearing due to global capitalism. โ€œSoniaโ€™s Dream,โ€ Diego Sarmientoโ€™s 14-minute film, traces Sonia Mamaniโ€™s travels from her island home in southern Peruโ€™s Lake Titicaca, where she developed a culinary expertise from an early age, across the South American continent as she teaches women how to prepare traditional dishes and to appreciate their local, indigenous customs. A Q&A with director Alvaro Sarmiento follows the screening.

Noteworthy in relation to the film seriesโ€™ focus on Indigenous media, the theater, film, and media studies department and the VOICES Reading Series at St. Maryโ€™s College will co-sponsor President Tuajuanda Jordanโ€™s guest on November 15, 2018 โ€“ celebrated, Pulitzer Prize-winning Native American (Kiowa) novelist, N. Scott Momaday, perhaps best known in this country for his breakthrough novel for Native American literature, โ€œThe House Made of Dawn.โ€ At 7:15 p.m. in Daugherty-Palmer Commons, Dr. Momaday will speak on โ€œNative American Oral History: The Stories and the Storytellerโ€ and on โ€œThe Language of Creativity: Writing, Painting, and Imagination.โ€

St. Maryโ€™s College of Maryland is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education through 2024-2025. St. Maryโ€™s College, designated the Maryland state honors college in 1992, is ranked one of the best public liberal arts schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Approximately 1,600 students attend the college, nestled on the St. Maryโ€™s River in Southern Maryland.