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Protest and Performance Week, 14-17 March - starts today!
From 14-17th March 2016, the Centre for Human Rights in Practice will be hosting a series of events that explore the theme of protest. Click on the links below for more info and to register.
Monday 14 March
Dr. James Harrison: Reflections on the Warwick Protest Summit
3-4pm, Room F1.07Panel Discussion: How do we make our voices heard?
6-7.30pm, Room MS.03. Including Emily Scurrah (38 Degrees) Adam Weymouth (journalist) and Father Martin Newell.
Tuesday 15 March
Dr. Grace Huxford and Dr. Richard Wallace: Memories of Protest at Warwick
Theatre Performance: To Know How You Stand 3.0
8pm, Warwick Arts Centre, Helen Martin Studio
Wednesday 16 March
Panel: ‘At What Cost? Perspectives on Protests over fees in Higher Education’
Kate Smurthwaite: ‘The Wrong Sort of Feminist (plus post-show Q&A)’
Thursday 17 March
Panel: Student Experiences of Protest
Film: 'We Are Many' followed by Q&A with film director Amir Amirani
Event: We Are Many (film & post-show discussion with director Amir Amirani) 17 March
We Are Many (& post-show discussion with director Amir Amirani)
17th March, 6pm, Warwick Arts Centre Cinema
We Are Many tells the story of the biggest demonstration in human history, which took place on 15th February 2003, against the impending war on Iraq. The Film's Director, Amir Amirani joins us to discuss the film after the showing and to answer questions from the audience. If you book though the Centre for Human Rights in Practice there will be a reduced charge of £3.50.
“Anyone doubting the value of protest should watch this film, for proof that the ripples of political pebbles can spread wide, and far beyond any immediate effects.... The only film i have ever watched where the audience started clapping half way through.” ★★★★★
"Rousing and moving. Its a film that should be seen by the many."
Radio Times
"A work of beautiful rage .... provokes anger and goosebumps."
Empire
"Amirani attempts what would seem an impossibility: to render artistically the outright messiness of the war, to bring together on film what are, respectively, political and defence issues, matters of international diplomacy, human rights abuses, disparate protest movements and personal stories. It is something of a feat. For We Are Many is not only an exposé of the war, but a salute to the spirit of protest."
Lacuna magazine: Protest ad the University
This week Lacuna is focusing on protest and the university.
Shirin Rai reports on “an undemocratic attack on one of the foremost universities of India” – Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) – by a government using a discourse of “sedition, nationalism and intolerance” to justify its actions. In ‘Barbarians at the Gate’, she also bears witness to the peaceful protests of staff and students, who came together to oppose this oppression.
In the United Kingdom, Alex Ferguson joined a protest in London against the scrapping of maintenance grants for the poorest students. Reflecting on the protest, he explains how he found himself ‘In the Kettle’, watching as a form of pre-scripted violence plays out to the assembled press corps.
Emma Mason finds a different way of protesting, also in the context of battles against the costs of UK higher education. She explains why she read Ginsberg’s poem ‘Howl’ to the largest rally ever seen on the Warwick University Campus.
In ‘Teaching about Creative Expressions of Resistance in contemporary Cairo’, Sam Holder details his response to the recent revolutions, protests and violence in Egypt.
Looking outward, we welcome Emily Scurrah, from the campaigning organisation 38 Degrees, to both Lacuna and Warwick. In ‘There is Power in a Union,’ Emily shares her optimism about what protestors can achieve when they work together, creatively, to tackle inequality and protect vital services.
Our choice of theme is very much linked to a series of events that will take place at the University of Warwick from 14-17 March. ‘Protest and Performance Week’ has been organised by staff and students at the university and is open to all. It includes panel discussions, comedy, film and theatre, and will feature a number of Lacuna authors. We hope that these two interventions will combine to prompt some interesting discussions about protest and free speech in the university context, and beyond.