Still from The Little Black School House
Still from The Little Black School House
 

On Demand

The Little Black School House

par Sylvia Hamilton
Un regard sans fard sur l'histoire de la ségrégation raciale dans les écoles du Canada et la lutte pour l'égalité d'accès à une éducation de qualité.
2007  ·  1h  ·  Canada
Anglais
Anglais (sous-titres)
À propos du film

Tourné dans les villages et villes de l’Ontario et de la Nouvelle-Écosse, THE LITTLE BLACK SCHOOL HOUSE dévoile l’histoire inédite des enfants, des femmes et des hommes qui ont été élèves et enseignants dans les écoles canadiennes où régnait la ségrégation raciale. Le documentaire de Sylvia Hamilton est une illustration poignante et d’une honnêteté sans faille des sentiments contradictoires qui animent nombre de ces anciens élèves. Lorsqu’ils repensent à leur expérience scolaire, ils éprouvent de la tendresse pour le dévouement de leurs enseignants noirs mais aussi de l’indignation d’être privés du droit fondamental à la démocratie au Canada : l’égalité d’accès à une éducation de qualité.

Accompagné d’une musique vibrante composée par la légende du jazz Joe Sealy, THE LITTLE BLACK SCHOOL HOUSE entremêle des images d’archives extraordinaires, des photographies rares et des témoignages touchants d’anciens élèves, d’enseignants, d’historiens et de dirigeants communautaires dans ce regard sans complaisance sur le cœur de l’inégalité raciale au Canada.

Crédit photo : Courtesy Maroon Films Inc.

Ce film est également disponible pour un usage éducatif et institutionnel. Pour réserver THE LITTLE BLACK SCHOOL HOUSE, contactez booking [at] cinemapolitica [dot] com

Projections à venir

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Dans la presse
Review
DAL News
Edition
John Brett
Production
Sylvia Hamilton and Maroon Films
Cinématographie
Kent Nason
Composition de bande son
Joe Sealy
À propos du cinéaste

Sylvia Hamilton

Sylvia Hamilton

Sylvia D. Hamilton is a multi awarding Nova Scotian filmmaker and writer who is known for her documentary films as well as her publications, public presentations and extensive volunteer work with artistic, social and cultural organizations on the local and national levels.  She was born in Beechville, Nova Scotia, a community founded by the Black Refugees from the War of 1812. She has a BA from Acadia University, an MA from Dalhousie University and has been awarded three honourary degrees in recognition of her work. From 2001- 2004 she held Nancy’s Chair in Women’s Studies at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax. She has taught at Acadia University and given lectures at the University of New Brunswick, Memorial, Queens, York and Simon Fraser universities, and at Middlebury College in Vermont, and the University of the West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica.

Prior to becoming involved in the film industry she worked in cable television, as a radio journalist and as a freelance broadcaster. She worked with the National Film Board’s Studio D in Montreal where she co-created New Initiatives in Film (NIF), the first specific program of its kind designed to provide opportunities for women of colour and First Nations from women from across Canada to make films. As Chair of the Women in Media Foundation (formerly the WTN Foundation) she lead the creation of technical training programs for girls and women in the television/film industry. She was a member of the Second Racial Equity Advisory Committee to the Canada Council (REAC) that advocated major policy changes to ensure that artists of colour would have equal access to Council grants and programs. As a recent member of the Content Advisory Committee (CAC) to the new Canadian Museum for Human Rights, she championed the idea and executive produced the final Video Report for the CAC.

She has served on and chaired a range of film and arts related juries at the national and provincial levels.  Her memberships include the Documentary Organization of Canada (DOC) and the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia (WFNS). Her films have been broadcast on CBC, TVO and the Knowledge Network and are in wide use in schools and universities across Canada.  She has been an invited filmmaker and keynote speaker in venues throughout Canada, and in Oslo, Freetown (Sierra Leone), Guadeloupe, the République de Mauritius), San Francisco, New York, Mexico City and Paris.  Major awards include a Gemini, Nova Scotia’s Portia White Prize for Excellence in the Arts, the Japan Broadcasting Corporation’s Maeda Prize, the Progress Women of Excellence Award for Arts and Culture and the CBC Television Pioneer Award. She was a 2008 Mentor with The Trudeau Foundation. In addition to making film through her company Maroon Films Inc, she currently holds the Rogers Chair in Communications at the University of King’s College School of Journalism in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Photo Credit: Nick Pearce

 

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