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DTSTART:20201101T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
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DTSTART:20200308T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:5823-84ab8aba10d0ebbae21a49983f7f322f@events.la.psu.edu
DTSTAMP:20260307T145121Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200215T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200215T203000
SUMMARY:Women Workers Film Festival
DESCRIPTION:\nWomen Workers in Struggle: Organizing for Voice and Power 
	Around the Globe\n\nDates: Feb. 15\, 11 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. and Feb. 16\, 1
	 p.m. - 5 p.m.\n\nThe Center for Global Workers&#39\; Rights in Penn Sta
	te&#39\;s School of Labor and Employment Relations is hosting a two-day 
	film festival.&nbsp\;This&nbsp\;event is cosponsored by&nbsp\;the Colleg
	e of the Liberal Arts\, the University Libraries\, the Department of Wom
	en&rsquo\;s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies\, and the Sustainability In
	stitute.&nbsp\;\n\nThis&nbsp\;two-day film festival will be composed of 
	documentary films that present a glimpse into the situations of women&rs
	quo\;s working lives across the globe\, told in their own vivid voices. 
	These films depict the exploitative nature of many of these industries\,
	 but importantly\, they also show the politics of how women have fought 
	for their rights at work\, at home\, and within broader civil society. T
	he festival features films that portray a variety of global struggles of
	 women workers\, including the unionizing of sex workers&nbsp\;in the Un
	ited States\, factory workers&rsquo\; 510-day strike in South Korea\, fe
	male farmers&rsquo\; organizing in Brazil\, the fearless women union lea
	ders in Bangladesh garment factories\, and the care workers&rsquo\; stru
	ggle in Poland.\n\n---\n\nSaturday\, February&nbsp\;15:\n\n11:00a.m. - 1
	2:15 p.m.\n\n&lsquo\;UDITA&#39\; (Arise)&nbsp\;(2015\,&nbsp\;Bangladesh\
	,&nbsp\;75 min)\n\n&#39\;UDITA&#39\;&nbsp\;follows a turbulent half deca
	de in the lives of women on the front line in the garment workers strugg
	le in Bangladesh. From 2010\,&nbsp\;when organizing in the workplace wou
	ld lead to beatings\, sacking and arrests\, through the tragedies of Taz
	reen and Rana Plaza\, and to&nbsp\;the present day\, when the long fight
	 has begun to pay dividends. We see this vital period through the eyes o
	f the unions&#39\; female&nbsp\;members\, workers and leaders.\n\n&nbsp\
	;\n\n1:00-1:45 p.m.\n\nThe Nanny&nbsp\;Business&nbsp\;(2010\, Canada\,&n
	bsp\;44 min)\n\nJoelina Maluto came to Canada after a in Hong Kong and t
	he Middle East because &ldquo\;I heard Canada was a good country\, and a
	fter two&nbsp\;years I could bring my children here.&rdquo\; Instead\, s
	he arrived to find she had no job and was forced to live in her agent&rs
	quo\;s basement with 16&nbsp\;other nannies for the next 2 and a half mo
	nths. When the agent finally got her a job\, the employer forced her to 
	work 18-hour days.&nbsp\;Joelina was among several nannies brave enough 
	to go public about their experiences in the hope of forcing change.\n\n&
	nbsp\;\n\n2:00-3:30 p.m.\n\nStrike a Rock&nbsp\;(2017\, S. Africa\,&nbsp
	\;87 min)\n\nStrike A Rock&nbsp\;is the story of two South African mothe
	rs and best-friends who formed a women&rsquo\;s organization\, Sikhala S
	onke (We Cry&nbsp\;Together)\, after their friend Paulina was killed by 
	police. They live in Nkaneng\, Marikana\, a rural informal settlement th
	at became&nbsp\;internationally known after the 2012 Marikana Massacre\,
	 when 37 striking mineworkers were killed by police. However\, the livin
	g&nbsp\;conditions that motivated the strike in the first place continue
	 to worsen. And this is what the women are fighting against.\n\n&nbsp\;\
	n\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\n\nThe Women&nbsp\;Workers&rsquo\; War&nbsp\;(2013\, I
	taly\,&nbsp\;54 min)\n\nThis is the story of longest factory sit-in by w
	omen&ndash\;500 days&ndash\;led by Rosa Giancola of Latina\, and a facto
	ry that churns out sweets and&nbsp\;thoughts\, led by Margherita Doglian
	i of Carrara. The documentary recounts the story of two women who are ve
	ry special and react in&nbsp\;profound and non-conventional ways to the 
	economic and moral crisis that grips Italy.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n5:30-6:45 p.m.
	\n\nLive Nude Girl&nbsp\;Unite&nbsp\;(2000\, USA\,&nbsp\;75 min)\n\nThis
	 documentary looks at the 1996-97 effort of the dancers and support staf
	f at a San Francisco peep show\, The Lusty Lady\, to unionize.&nbsp\;Ang
	ered by arbitrary and race-based wage policies\, customers&#39\; surrept
	itious video cameras\, and no paid sick days or holidays\, the&nbsp\;dan
	cers get help from the Service Employees International local and enter p
	rotracted bargaining with the union-busting law firm that&nbsp\;manageme
	nt hires. We see the women work\, sort out their demands\, and go throug
	h the difficulties of bargaining. The narrator is Julia&nbsp\;Query\, a 
	dancer and stand-up comedian who is reluctant to tell her mother\, a phy
	sician who works with prostitutes\, that she strips.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n7:00-
	8:30 p.m.\n\nComplicit&nbsp\;(2017\, China\,&nbsp\;90 min)\n\nThis docum
	entary was filmed over 3 years in China&rsquo\;s electronics zones Shenz
	hen and Guangzhou with lush cinematography and unique&nbsp\;access. The 
	film takes the audience on an 8000-mile journey to the world&rsquo\;s el
	ectronics factory floors\, revealing the situations under which&nbsp\;Ch
	ina&rsquo\;s youth population has shifted by the millions in search of a
	 better life.\n\n---\n\nSunday\, February 16:\n\n1:00-&nbsp\;1:30 p.m.&n
	bsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\;&nbsp\;\n\n
	The Seeds&nbsp\;(2015\, Brazil\,&nbsp\;30 min)\n\nThe Seeds&nbsp\;portra
	ys life trajectories of women farmers participating actively in agroecol
	ogical movements in Brazil. They are protagonists&nbsp\;of important soc
	ial changes in the Brazilian countryside. Moreover\, these women organiz
	e the movements themselves\, autonomously\, as&nbsp\;social and politica
	l leaders that are questioning stereotypes of the social imaginary.\n\n&
	nbsp\;\n\n2:00-3:15 p.m.\n\nStayed Out&nbsp\;Overnight&nbsp\;(2009\, S. 
	Korea\,&nbsp\;73 min)\n\nOn the night of June 30\, 2007\, cashiers and s
	alespeople of Homever\, a superstore in South Korea\, started to fight f
	or their rights and to&nbsp\;disclose issues regarding contract-worker p
	rotection laws. This was not only the first in-house picketing action by
	 young women workers&nbsp\;in history\, but it also gave them an opportu
	nity to seek a new ego as women. Their one-night picketing in the store 
	turned into a 510-day&nbsp\;strike. This long struggle revealed problems
	 and limitations of the labor movement in Korea.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n4:00-5:00
	 p.m.\n\nThe Women&#39\;s&nbsp\;Strike Continues&nbsp\;(2018\, Poland\,&
	nbsp\;52min)\n\nThis is a film about the struggle of women who work in m
	unicipal kindergartens and nurseries in Poznań (Poland). They fight for 
	living&nbsp\;wages and better conditions for themselves and the kids. In
	 2011\, the women set up a union section. Since then they have learned t
	o put&nbsp\;pressure on their employers effectively\, and they have also
	 supported other workers during their struggles.\n\nFor more details: ht
	tps://events.la.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><a href="https:
	//ler.la.psu.edu/news/news/women-workers2019-film-festival-feb-15-16"><i
	>Women Workers in Struggle: Organizing for Voice and Power Around the Gl
	obe</i></a></p><p>Dates: Feb. 15, 11 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. and Feb. 16, 1 p.m
	. - 5 p.m.</p><p>The Center for Global Workers&#39; Rights in Penn State
	&#39;s School of Labor and Employment Relations is hosting a two-day fil
	m festival.&nbsp;This&nbsp;event is cosponsored by&nbsp;the College of t
	he Liberal Arts, the University Libraries, the Department of Women&rsquo
	;s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and the Sustainability Institute.&nbs
	p;</p><p>This&nbsp;two-day film festival will be composed of documentary
	 films that present a glimpse into the situations of women&rsquo;s worki
	ng lives across the globe, told in their own vivid voices. These films d
	epict the exploitative nature of many of these industries, but important
	ly, they also show the politics of how women have fought for their right
	s at work, at home, and within broader civil society. The festival featu
	res films that portray a variety of global struggles of women workers, i
	ncluding the unionizing of sex workers&nbsp;in the United States, factor
	y workers&rsquo; 510-day strike in South Korea, female farmers&rsquo; or
	ganizing in Brazil, the fearless women union leaders in Bangladesh garme
	nt factories, and the care workers&rsquo; struggle in Poland.</p><p>---<
	/p><p><b>Saturday, February&nbsp;15:</b></p><p>11:00a.m. - 12:15 p.m.</p
	><p><i>&lsquo;UDITA&#39; (Arise)&nbsp;</i>(2015,&nbsp;Bangladesh,&nbsp;7
	5 min)</p><p><i>&#39;UDITA&#39;&nbsp;</i>follows a turbulent half decade
	 in the lives of women on the front line in the garment workers struggle
	 in Bangladesh. From 2010,&nbsp;when organizing in the workplace would l
	ead to beatings, sacking and arrests, through the tragedies of Tazreen a
	nd Rana Plaza, and to&nbsp;the present day, when the long fight has begu
	n to pay dividends. We see this vital period through the eyes of the uni
	ons&#39; female&nbsp;members, workers and leaders.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>1:
	00-1:45 p.m.</p><p><i>The Nanny&nbsp;Business</i>&nbsp;(2010, Canada,&nb
	sp;44 min)</p><p>Joelina Maluto came to Canada after a in Hong Kong and 
	the Middle East because &ldquo;I heard Canada was a good country, and af
	ter two&nbsp;years I could bring my children here.&rdquo; Instead, she a
	rrived to find she had no job and was forced to live in her agent&rsquo;
	s basement with 16&nbsp;other nannies for the next 2 and a half months. 
	When the agent finally got her a job, the employer forced her to work 18
	-hour days.&nbsp;Joelina was among several nannies brave enough to go pu
	blic about their experiences in the hope of forcing change.</p><p>&nbsp;
	</p><p>2:00-3:30 p.m.</p><p><i>Strike a Rock</i>&nbsp;(2017, S. Africa,&
	nbsp;87 min)</p><p><i>Strike A Rock</i>&nbsp;is the story of two South A
	frican mothers and best-friends who formed a women&rsquo;s organization,
	 Sikhala Sonke (<i>We Cry&nbsp;Together</i>), after their friend Paulina
	 was killed by police. They live in Nkaneng, Marikana, a rural informal 
	settlement that became&nbsp;internationally known after the 2012 Marikan
	a Massacre, when 37 striking mineworkers were killed by police. However,
	 the living&nbsp;conditions that motivated the strike in the first place
	 continue to worsen. And this is what the women are fighting against.</p
	><p>&nbsp;</p><p>4:00-5:00 p.m.</p><p><i>The Women&nbsp;Workers&rsquo; W
	ar</i>&nbsp;(2013, Italy,&nbsp;54 min)</p><p>This is the story of longes
	t factory sit-in by women&ndash;500 days&ndash;led by Rosa Giancola of L
	atina, and a factory that churns out sweets and&nbsp;thoughts, led by Ma
	rgherita Dogliani of Carrara. The documentary recounts the story of two 
	women who are very special and react in&nbsp;profound and non-convention
	al ways to the economic and moral crisis that grips Italy.</p><p>&nbsp;<
	/p><p>5:30-6:45 p.m.</p><p><i>Live Nude Girl&nbsp;Unite</i>&nbsp;(2000, 
	USA,&nbsp;75 min)</p><p>This documentary looks at the 1996-97 effort of 
	the dancers and support staff at a San Francisco peep show, The Lusty La
	dy, to unionize.&nbsp;Angered by arbitrary and race-based wage policies,
	 customers&#39; surreptitious video cameras, and no paid sick days or ho
	lidays, the&nbsp;dancers get help from the Service Employees Internation
	al local and enter protracted bargaining with the union-busting law firm
	 that&nbsp;management hires. We see the women work, sort out their deman
	ds, and go through the difficulties of bargaining. The narrator is Julia
	&nbsp;Query, a dancer and stand-up comedian who is reluctant to tell her
	 mother, a physician who works with prostitutes, that she strips.</p><p>
	&nbsp;</p><p>7:00-8:30 p.m.</p><p><i>Complicit</i>&nbsp;(2017, China,&nb
	sp;90 min)</p><p>This documentary was filmed over 3 years in China&rsquo
	;s electronics zones Shenzhen and Guangzhou with lush cinematography and
	 unique&nbsp;access. The film takes the audience on an 8000-mile journey
	 to the world&rsquo;s electronics factory floors, revealing the situatio
	ns under which&nbsp;China&rsquo;s youth population has shifted by the mi
	llions in search of a better life.</p><p>---</p><p><b>Sunday, February 1
	6:</b></p><p>1:00-&nbsp;1:30 p.m.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbs
	p; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p><i>The Seeds</i>&nbsp;(2015, Brazil,&nbsp;3
	0 min)</p><p><i>The Seeds</i>&nbsp;portrays life trajectories of women f
	armers participating actively in agroecological movements in Brazil. The
	y are protagonists&nbsp;of important social changes in the Brazilian cou
	ntryside. Moreover, these women organize the movements themselves, auton
	omously, as&nbsp;social and political leaders that are questioning stere
	otypes of the social imaginary.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>2:00-3:15 p.m.</p><p>
	<i>Stayed Out&nbsp;Overnigh</i>t&nbsp;(2009, S. Korea,&nbsp;73 min)</p><
	p>On the night of June 30, 2007, cashiers and salespeople of Homever, a 
	superstore in South Korea, started to fight for their rights and to&nbsp
	;disclose issues regarding contract-worker protection laws. This was not
	 only the first in-house picketing action by young women workers&nbsp;in
	 history, but it also gave them an opportunity to seek a new ego as wome
	n. Their one-night picketing in the store turned into a 510-day&nbsp;str
	ike. This long struggle revealed problems and limitations of the labor m
	ovement in Korea.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>4:00-5:00 p.m.</p><p><i>The Women&#
	39;s&nbsp;Strike Continues</i>&nbsp;(2018, Poland,&nbsp;52min)</p><p>Thi
	s is a film about the struggle of women who work in municipal kindergart
	ens and nurseries in Poznań (Poland). They fight for living&nbsp;wages a
	nd better conditions for themselves and the kids. In 2011, the women set
	 up a union section. Since then they have learned to put&nbsp;pressure o
	n their employers effectively, and they have also supported other worker
	s during their struggles.</p><p>For more details: <a href='https://event
	s.la.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/'>https://events.la
	.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/</a></p></body></html>
URL:https://ler.la.psu.edu/news/news/women-workers2019-film-festival-feb-15-
	16
LOCATION:Foster Auditorium, 102 Paterno Library
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:5823-d821aaf15ba901e5e2f9cb5405085c8b@events.la.psu.edu
DTSTAMP:20260307T145121Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200216T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200216T170000
SUMMARY:Women Workers Film Festival
DESCRIPTION:\nWomen Workers in Struggle: Organizing for Voice and Power 
	Around the Globe\n\nDates: Feb. 15\, 11 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. and Feb. 16\, 1
	 p.m. - 5 p.m.\n\nThe Center for Global Workers&#39\; Rights in Penn Sta
	te&#39\;s School of Labor and Employment Relations is hosting a two-day 
	film festival.&nbsp\;This&nbsp\;event is cosponsored by&nbsp\;the Colleg
	e of the Liberal Arts\, the University Libraries\, the Department of Wom
	en&rsquo\;s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies\, and the Sustainability In
	stitute.&nbsp\;\n\nThis&nbsp\;two-day film festival will be composed of 
	documentary films that present a glimpse into the situations of women&rs
	quo\;s working lives across the globe\, told in their own vivid voices. 
	These films depict the exploitative nature of many of these industries\,
	 but importantly\, they also show the politics of how women have fought 
	for their rights at work\, at home\, and within broader civil society. T
	he festival features films that portray a variety of global struggles of
	 women workers\, including the unionizing of sex workers&nbsp\;in the Un
	ited States\, factory workers&rsquo\; 510-day strike in South Korea\, fe
	male farmers&rsquo\; organizing in Brazil\, the fearless women union lea
	ders in Bangladesh garment factories\, and the care workers&rsquo\; stru
	ggle in Poland.\n\n---\n\nSaturday\, February&nbsp\;15:\n\n11:00a.m. - 1
	2:15 p.m.\n\n&lsquo\;UDITA&#39\; (Arise)&nbsp\;(2015\,&nbsp\;Bangladesh\
	,&nbsp\;75 min)\n\n&#39\;UDITA&#39\;&nbsp\;follows a turbulent half deca
	de in the lives of women on the front line in the garment workers strugg
	le in Bangladesh. From 2010\,&nbsp\;when organizing in the workplace wou
	ld lead to beatings\, sacking and arrests\, through the tragedies of Taz
	reen and Rana Plaza\, and to&nbsp\;the present day\, when the long fight
	 has begun to pay dividends. We see this vital period through the eyes o
	f the unions&#39\; female&nbsp\;members\, workers and leaders.\n\n&nbsp\
	;\n\n1:00-1:45 p.m.\n\nThe Nanny&nbsp\;Business&nbsp\;(2010\, Canada\,&n
	bsp\;44 min)\n\nJoelina Maluto came to Canada after a in Hong Kong and t
	he Middle East because &ldquo\;I heard Canada was a good country\, and a
	fter two&nbsp\;years I could bring my children here.&rdquo\; Instead\, s
	he arrived to find she had no job and was forced to live in her agent&rs
	quo\;s basement with 16&nbsp\;other nannies for the next 2 and a half mo
	nths. When the agent finally got her a job\, the employer forced her to 
	work 18-hour days.&nbsp\;Joelina was among several nannies brave enough 
	to go public about their experiences in the hope of forcing change.\n\n&
	nbsp\;\n\n2:00-3:30 p.m.\n\nStrike a Rock&nbsp\;(2017\, S. Africa\,&nbsp
	\;87 min)\n\nStrike A Rock&nbsp\;is the story of two South African mothe
	rs and best-friends who formed a women&rsquo\;s organization\, Sikhala S
	onke (We Cry&nbsp\;Together)\, after their friend Paulina was killed by 
	police. They live in Nkaneng\, Marikana\, a rural informal settlement th
	at became&nbsp\;internationally known after the 2012 Marikana Massacre\,
	 when 37 striking mineworkers were killed by police. However\, the livin
	g&nbsp\;conditions that motivated the strike in the first place continue
	 to worsen. And this is what the women are fighting against.\n\n&nbsp\;\
	n\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\n\nThe Women&nbsp\;Workers&rsquo\; War&nbsp\;(2013\, I
	taly\,&nbsp\;54 min)\n\nThis is the story of longest factory sit-in by w
	omen&ndash\;500 days&ndash\;led by Rosa Giancola of Latina\, and a facto
	ry that churns out sweets and&nbsp\;thoughts\, led by Margherita Doglian
	i of Carrara. The documentary recounts the story of two women who are ve
	ry special and react in&nbsp\;profound and non-conventional ways to the 
	economic and moral crisis that grips Italy.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n5:30-6:45 p.m.
	\n\nLive Nude Girl&nbsp\;Unite&nbsp\;(2000\, USA\,&nbsp\;75 min)\n\nThis
	 documentary looks at the 1996-97 effort of the dancers and support staf
	f at a San Francisco peep show\, The Lusty Lady\, to unionize.&nbsp\;Ang
	ered by arbitrary and race-based wage policies\, customers&#39\; surrept
	itious video cameras\, and no paid sick days or holidays\, the&nbsp\;dan
	cers get help from the Service Employees International local and enter p
	rotracted bargaining with the union-busting law firm that&nbsp\;manageme
	nt hires. We see the women work\, sort out their demands\, and go throug
	h the difficulties of bargaining. The narrator is Julia&nbsp\;Query\, a 
	dancer and stand-up comedian who is reluctant to tell her mother\, a phy
	sician who works with prostitutes\, that she strips.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n7:00-
	8:30 p.m.\n\nComplicit&nbsp\;(2017\, China\,&nbsp\;90 min)\n\nThis docum
	entary was filmed over 3 years in China&rsquo\;s electronics zones Shenz
	hen and Guangzhou with lush cinematography and unique&nbsp\;access. The 
	film takes the audience on an 8000-mile journey to the world&rsquo\;s el
	ectronics factory floors\, revealing the situations under which&nbsp\;Ch
	ina&rsquo\;s youth population has shifted by the millions in search of a
	 better life.\n\n---\n\nSunday\, February 16:\n\n1:00-&nbsp\;1:30 p.m.&n
	bsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\;&nbsp\;\n\n
	The Seeds&nbsp\;(2015\, Brazil\,&nbsp\;30 min)\n\nThe Seeds&nbsp\;portra
	ys life trajectories of women farmers participating actively in agroecol
	ogical movements in Brazil. They are protagonists&nbsp\;of important soc
	ial changes in the Brazilian countryside. Moreover\, these women organiz
	e the movements themselves\, autonomously\, as&nbsp\;social and politica
	l leaders that are questioning stereotypes of the social imaginary.\n\n&
	nbsp\;\n\n2:00-3:15 p.m.\n\nStayed Out&nbsp\;Overnight&nbsp\;(2009\, S. 
	Korea\,&nbsp\;73 min)\n\nOn the night of June 30\, 2007\, cashiers and s
	alespeople of Homever\, a superstore in South Korea\, started to fight f
	or their rights and to&nbsp\;disclose issues regarding contract-worker p
	rotection laws. This was not only the first in-house picketing action by
	 young women workers&nbsp\;in history\, but it also gave them an opportu
	nity to seek a new ego as women. Their one-night picketing in the store 
	turned into a 510-day&nbsp\;strike. This long struggle revealed problems
	 and limitations of the labor movement in Korea.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n4:00-5:00
	 p.m.\n\nThe Women&#39\;s&nbsp\;Strike Continues&nbsp\;(2018\, Poland\,&
	nbsp\;52min)\n\nThis is a film about the struggle of women who work in m
	unicipal kindergartens and nurseries in Poznań (Poland). They fight for 
	living&nbsp\;wages and better conditions for themselves and the kids. In
	 2011\, the women set up a union section. Since then they have learned t
	o put&nbsp\;pressure on their employers effectively\, and they have also
	 supported other workers during their struggles.\n\nFor more details: ht
	tps://events.la.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><a href="https:
	//ler.la.psu.edu/news/news/women-workers2019-film-festival-feb-15-16"><i
	>Women Workers in Struggle: Organizing for Voice and Power Around the Gl
	obe</i></a></p><p>Dates: Feb. 15, 11 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. and Feb. 16, 1 p.m
	. - 5 p.m.</p><p>The Center for Global Workers&#39; Rights in Penn State
	&#39;s School of Labor and Employment Relations is hosting a two-day fil
	m festival.&nbsp;This&nbsp;event is cosponsored by&nbsp;the College of t
	he Liberal Arts, the University Libraries, the Department of Women&rsquo
	;s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and the Sustainability Institute.&nbs
	p;</p><p>This&nbsp;two-day film festival will be composed of documentary
	 films that present a glimpse into the situations of women&rsquo;s worki
	ng lives across the globe, told in their own vivid voices. These films d
	epict the exploitative nature of many of these industries, but important
	ly, they also show the politics of how women have fought for their right
	s at work, at home, and within broader civil society. The festival featu
	res films that portray a variety of global struggles of women workers, i
	ncluding the unionizing of sex workers&nbsp;in the United States, factor
	y workers&rsquo; 510-day strike in South Korea, female farmers&rsquo; or
	ganizing in Brazil, the fearless women union leaders in Bangladesh garme
	nt factories, and the care workers&rsquo; struggle in Poland.</p><p>---<
	/p><p><b>Saturday, February&nbsp;15:</b></p><p>11:00a.m. - 12:15 p.m.</p
	><p><i>&lsquo;UDITA&#39; (Arise)&nbsp;</i>(2015,&nbsp;Bangladesh,&nbsp;7
	5 min)</p><p><i>&#39;UDITA&#39;&nbsp;</i>follows a turbulent half decade
	 in the lives of women on the front line in the garment workers struggle
	 in Bangladesh. From 2010,&nbsp;when organizing in the workplace would l
	ead to beatings, sacking and arrests, through the tragedies of Tazreen a
	nd Rana Plaza, and to&nbsp;the present day, when the long fight has begu
	n to pay dividends. We see this vital period through the eyes of the uni
	ons&#39; female&nbsp;members, workers and leaders.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>1:
	00-1:45 p.m.</p><p><i>The Nanny&nbsp;Business</i>&nbsp;(2010, Canada,&nb
	sp;44 min)</p><p>Joelina Maluto came to Canada after a in Hong Kong and 
	the Middle East because &ldquo;I heard Canada was a good country, and af
	ter two&nbsp;years I could bring my children here.&rdquo; Instead, she a
	rrived to find she had no job and was forced to live in her agent&rsquo;
	s basement with 16&nbsp;other nannies for the next 2 and a half months. 
	When the agent finally got her a job, the employer forced her to work 18
	-hour days.&nbsp;Joelina was among several nannies brave enough to go pu
	blic about their experiences in the hope of forcing change.</p><p>&nbsp;
	</p><p>2:00-3:30 p.m.</p><p><i>Strike a Rock</i>&nbsp;(2017, S. Africa,&
	nbsp;87 min)</p><p><i>Strike A Rock</i>&nbsp;is the story of two South A
	frican mothers and best-friends who formed a women&rsquo;s organization,
	 Sikhala Sonke (<i>We Cry&nbsp;Together</i>), after their friend Paulina
	 was killed by police. They live in Nkaneng, Marikana, a rural informal 
	settlement that became&nbsp;internationally known after the 2012 Marikan
	a Massacre, when 37 striking mineworkers were killed by police. However,
	 the living&nbsp;conditions that motivated the strike in the first place
	 continue to worsen. And this is what the women are fighting against.</p
	><p>&nbsp;</p><p>4:00-5:00 p.m.</p><p><i>The Women&nbsp;Workers&rsquo; W
	ar</i>&nbsp;(2013, Italy,&nbsp;54 min)</p><p>This is the story of longes
	t factory sit-in by women&ndash;500 days&ndash;led by Rosa Giancola of L
	atina, and a factory that churns out sweets and&nbsp;thoughts, led by Ma
	rgherita Dogliani of Carrara. The documentary recounts the story of two 
	women who are very special and react in&nbsp;profound and non-convention
	al ways to the economic and moral crisis that grips Italy.</p><p>&nbsp;<
	/p><p>5:30-6:45 p.m.</p><p><i>Live Nude Girl&nbsp;Unite</i>&nbsp;(2000, 
	USA,&nbsp;75 min)</p><p>This documentary looks at the 1996-97 effort of 
	the dancers and support staff at a San Francisco peep show, The Lusty La
	dy, to unionize.&nbsp;Angered by arbitrary and race-based wage policies,
	 customers&#39; surreptitious video cameras, and no paid sick days or ho
	lidays, the&nbsp;dancers get help from the Service Employees Internation
	al local and enter protracted bargaining with the union-busting law firm
	 that&nbsp;management hires. We see the women work, sort out their deman
	ds, and go through the difficulties of bargaining. The narrator is Julia
	&nbsp;Query, a dancer and stand-up comedian who is reluctant to tell her
	 mother, a physician who works with prostitutes, that she strips.</p><p>
	&nbsp;</p><p>7:00-8:30 p.m.</p><p><i>Complicit</i>&nbsp;(2017, China,&nb
	sp;90 min)</p><p>This documentary was filmed over 3 years in China&rsquo
	;s electronics zones Shenzhen and Guangzhou with lush cinematography and
	 unique&nbsp;access. The film takes the audience on an 8000-mile journey
	 to the world&rsquo;s electronics factory floors, revealing the situatio
	ns under which&nbsp;China&rsquo;s youth population has shifted by the mi
	llions in search of a better life.</p><p>---</p><p><b>Sunday, February 1
	6:</b></p><p>1:00-&nbsp;1:30 p.m.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbs
	p; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p><i>The Seeds</i>&nbsp;(2015, Brazil,&nbsp;3
	0 min)</p><p><i>The Seeds</i>&nbsp;portrays life trajectories of women f
	armers participating actively in agroecological movements in Brazil. The
	y are protagonists&nbsp;of important social changes in the Brazilian cou
	ntryside. Moreover, these women organize the movements themselves, auton
	omously, as&nbsp;social and political leaders that are questioning stere
	otypes of the social imaginary.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>2:00-3:15 p.m.</p><p>
	<i>Stayed Out&nbsp;Overnigh</i>t&nbsp;(2009, S. Korea,&nbsp;73 min)</p><
	p>On the night of June 30, 2007, cashiers and salespeople of Homever, a 
	superstore in South Korea, started to fight for their rights and to&nbsp
	;disclose issues regarding contract-worker protection laws. This was not
	 only the first in-house picketing action by young women workers&nbsp;in
	 history, but it also gave them an opportunity to seek a new ego as wome
	n. Their one-night picketing in the store turned into a 510-day&nbsp;str
	ike. This long struggle revealed problems and limitations of the labor m
	ovement in Korea.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>4:00-5:00 p.m.</p><p><i>The Women&#
	39;s&nbsp;Strike Continues</i>&nbsp;(2018, Poland,&nbsp;52min)</p><p>Thi
	s is a film about the struggle of women who work in municipal kindergart
	ens and nurseries in Poznań (Poland). They fight for living&nbsp;wages a
	nd better conditions for themselves and the kids. In 2011, the women set
	 up a union section. Since then they have learned to put&nbsp;pressure o
	n their employers effectively, and they have also supported other worker
	s during their struggles.</p><p>For more details: <a href='https://event
	s.la.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/'>https://events.la
	.psu.edu/event/women_workers_film_festival_day_1/</a></p></body></html>
URL:https://ler.la.psu.edu/news/news/women-workers2019-film-festival-feb-15-
	16
LOCATION:Foster Auditorium, 102 Paterno Library
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR