Poetry of Witness

Poetry of Witness
Directed by Billy Tooma
Anthony Cirilo
Starring Carolyn Forché
Saghi Ghahraman
Fady Joudah
Neil J. Kressel
Claudia Serea
Mario Susko
Bruce Weigl
Duncan Wu
Music by Will Lewis
Production
company
Icon Independent Films
Release dates
October 16, 2015
Running time
60 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Poetry of Witness is a 2015 documentary film directed by Billy Tooma and Anthony Cirilo about the lives of six contemporary poets who have lived through, and survived, extremities such as war, torture, exile, and repression, using poetry to preserve their memories.[1] It debuted October 16, 2015 at the Buffalo International Film Festival.[2]

Synopsis

The film documents the struggle of six contemporary poets who have faced the duress of war, exile, and human rights violations to give voice to their experiences while wrestling with the complex moral quandaries of artistic production, memory, and trauma. The poets: Carolyn Forché (Salvadoran Civil War), Saghi Ghahraman (Iranian Revolution), Fady Joudah (Doctors Without Borders), Claudia Serea (Socialist Republic of Romania), Mario Susko (Bosnian War), and Bruce Weigl (Vietnam War) offer first-person accounts of how their experiences as soldier, activist, doctor, and survivor imprint their poetry as evidence of those conflicts, rather than as representations of them.

Along the way, the poets read from their work and all poems are accompanied by original artwork by Jimmy Buitrago, as well as a musical score by Will Lewis. Thus, the story is told both through an evolving conversation with the poets, as well as through musical and visual interpretations of the poems, evolving the story from a contextualization of the term “poetry of witness” to thematic conversations around the questions of memory and imagination, to truth and the ethics of identity, to the struggle for freedom of speech and the rights to one’s own body. Duncan Wu (Georgetown University) and Neil J. Kressel (William Paterson University) help to contextualize these discussions throughout with historical and psychoanalytic perspectives.

The film can be seen as an extension of the decades-long work Forché has conducted in the subject,[3] beginning with her landmark anthology Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of Witness (1993).[4] Coinciding with the publication of a new anthology (co-edited by Forché and Wu), Poetry of Witness: The Tradition in English, 1500-2001 (2014),[5] this documentary brings the conversation to a wider audience.

References

  1. "Poem of Witness". www.mrbassonline.com. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  2. "Inside the Buffalo International Film Festival". Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  3. "Reading the Living Archives: The Witness of Literary Art by Carolyn Forché - Poetry Magazine". www.poetryfoundation.org. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  4. aapone (2014-02-04). "Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of Witness". Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of Witness | Academy of American Poets. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  5. "Poetry in Extremis". The New Yorker. 2014-02-12. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
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