Home » Page 3

  • Why They Gotta Do Me Like That?

    Why They Gotta Do Me Like That?

    “Why They Gotta Do Me Like That? The Empowered Fe Fes Take On Bullying” was produced in a workshop with the junior group of the Empowered Fe Fes. In this film, 13 young women with disabilities explore school-based bullying by interviewing people on why bullying happens and how they respond, then acting out common experiences with new solutions. The Empowered Fe Fes demand viewers to consider bullying as a serious issue of discrimination, letting us know that we can work together to both understand the stop the problem. See https://beyondmedia.org for more information.

  • Doin’ It: Sex, Disability, and Videotape

    Doin’ It: Sex, Disability, and Videotape

    The Empowered Fe Fes, a peer group of young women aged 16 to 24 with different disabilities, strike again with their second video production, an insightful investigation into the truths about sex and disability. In the video, the Fe Fes educate themselves about sex from many angles by talking with activists and scholars. The viewer tags along on a date between a woman with a disability and her able-bodied boyfriend, exploring relationship issues of dating with a disability over a candle-lit dinner. See http://beyondmedia.org for more information.

  • [Interview with Wenona Thompson]

    [Interview with Wenona Thompson]

    In 1993, Girl Talk, a program for girls, ages 12-17, who are detained in the Cook County Temporary Juvenile Detention Center (JTDC), came into being as the brainchild of some very dynamic women and their sponsoring organizations, the Children and Family Justice Center of Northwestern Law School (CFJC) and Chicago Women’s Health Center. A survey of the girls, conducted by CFJC, found that they faced a number of serious concerns on a daily basis, including sexual assault and other forms of violence, relationships and conflict resolution, education and employment, legal rights, and a wide range of health issues. Programming and services related to these issues were almost non-existent through the detention center, and Girl Talk, a name chosen by the girls themselves was one answer. Girl Talk started as an eight-week pilot project and quickly grew into a weekly year-round one.It grew over the years and was eventually led by Wenona Thompson, a young woman who had spent time within those walls herself as a teenager. Eventually Girl Talk developed a program called Talk Out which extended the program to the girls once they were released from the detention center. Girl Talk ended in 2005 and Wenona Thompson tragically passed away way too young at the age of 32 in 2008. (See https://chicagogirltalk.wordpress.com for more information.)
    Thompson shares her story and work with Girl Talk in this interview conducted by Salome Chasnoff and Beyondmedia Education for the educational website womenandprison.org.

  • Girls Best Friend Sunset Tribute

    Girls Best Friend Sunset Tribute

    Beyondmedia Education compiled a tribute to Girl’s Best Friend Foundation as the foundation came to a close in 2007 after 13 years of providing grant funding to organizations with the goal of promoting civil rights and social change for girls and young women. About Face Theatre, Access Living (Empowered Fe Fes), Alternatives, Inc. Girl World, Beyondmedia Education, Chicago Girl’s Coalition, Chicago Women’s Health Center, Family Matters, Girls in the Game, Global Girls Inc., Illinois Caucus for Adolescent Health, Project Exploration, Sisters Empowering Sisters, Umoja (Women of Destiny), and Young Women’s Action Team come together in this tribute to thank Girl’s Best Friend Foundation for their support.

  • Voices in Time: Lives in Limbo

    Voices in Time: Lives in Limbo

    In March 2004, Beyondmedia collaborated with their longtime partner, Chicago Legal Advocacy for Incarcerated Mothers (CLAIM), to produce Voices in Time: Lives in Limbo, a series of art & education events on women and girls’ incarceration and its impact on families at Las Manos Gallery in Chicago. The event aimed to give voice to imprisoned women and girls through visual art, media, written and spoken word, and critical dialogue. This project featured Beyondmedia’s multimedia installation that recreates a prison cell through the eyes of its female prisoners together with live performances by former prisoners, an exhibition of art by women and girls in prison and an audio installation with family members of incarcerated women. Through Beyondmedia’s Women and Prison program, incarcerated women and girls, former prisoners and their families use media arts to voice their stories, promoting public dialogue, healing and community organizing. Since 1997, Beyondmedia has collaborated extensively with women and girls in prison and after their incarceration to create interdisciplinary, multimedia educational forums on women and prison. See http://beyondmedia.org for more information.

  • Turning a Corner (press promo)

    Turning a Corner (press promo)

    Turning a Corner tells the stories of people involved in the sex trade and their efforts to raise public awareness of systemic injustice and promote needed reforms. Created in a media activism workshop with over a dozen members of Prostitution Alternatives Round Table (PART), this groundbreaking film recounts their survival and triumph over homelessness, violence and discrimination, and gives rare insights into Chicago’s sex trade industry. The new version includes interview updates with many of the participants from the original film.

    Through Beyondmedia’s Women and Prison program, incarcerated women and girls, former prisoners and their families use media arts to voice their stories, promoting public dialogue, healing and community organizing. Since 1997, Beyondmedia has collaborated extensively with women and girls in prison and after their incarceration to create interdisciplinary, multimedia educational forums on women and prison.

  • Turning a Corner

    Turning a Corner

    Turning a Corner tells the stories of people involved in the sex trade and their efforts to raise public awareness of systemic injustice and promote needed reforms. Created in a media activism workshop with over a dozen members of Prostitution Alternatives Round Table (PART), this groundbreaking film recounts their survival and triumph over homelessness, violence and discrimination, and gives rare insights into Chicago’s sex trade industry. The new version includes interview updates with many of the participants from the original film.

    Through Beyondmedia’s Women and Prison program, incarcerated women and girls, former prisoners and their families use media arts to voice their stories, promoting public dialogue, healing and community organizing. Since 1997, Beyondmedia has collaborated extensively with women and girls in prison and after their incarceration to create interdisciplinary, multimedia educational forums on women and prison.

  • Everybody In, Nobody Out

    Health and Medicine Policy Research Group in Honor of the 80th Birthday of Dr. Quentin Young.

 
 
Copyright © 2024 Media Burn Archive.
Media Burn Archive | 935 W Chestnut St Suite 405 Chicago IL 60642
(312) 964-5020 | [email protected]