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Estudios de nativos americanos • Sociología • Historia de EE. UU. • Estudios americanos • Sociología del deporte • Estudios medioambientales
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¿Qué significa ser un REVOLUCIONARIO AMERICANO hoy? Grace Lee Boggs, una mujer chino-estadounidense de Detroit, que murió en octubre de 2015 a los 100 años, tiene una visión sorprendente de la revolución. Escritora, activista y filósofa arraigada durante más de 70 años en el movimiento afroamericano, dedicó su vida a una revolución en evolución que abarcaba las contradicciones del pasado de Estados Unidos y su futuro potencialmente radical. Este documental ganador del Premio Peabody nos sumerge en la práctica de toda la vida de Boggs de encender el diálogo y la acción comunitarios, trabajo que atraviesa los principales movimientos sociales estadounidenses del siglo pasado: desde los derechos laborales hasta los derechos civiles, pasando por el Black Power, el feminismo, el asiático-americano y el medio ambiente. movimientos de justicia y más allá.
Angela Davis, Bill Moyers, Bill Ayers, Ruby Dee y Ossie Davis, Danny Glover, el marido de Boggs, James Boggs, y una gran cantidad de camaradas de Detroit de tres generaciones ayudan a dar forma a esta historia exclusivamente estadounidense. Mientras lucha con un Detroit en transición, las contradicciones de la violencia y la no violencia, Malcolm X y Martin Luther King Jr., las rebeliones de 1967 y nociones no lineales del tiempo y la historia, Boggs emerge con un enfoque que es radical en su simplicidad y claridad: la revolución no es un acto de agresión o simplemente una protesta. La revolución, dice Boggs, tiene que ver con algo más profundo dentro de la experiencia humana: la capacidad de transformarse uno mismo para transformar el mundo. Con más de diez años de realización, esta película interdisciplinaria tiene un gran atractivo.
New York Times
"Change happens slowly. There’s no central source of information about the number of U.S. prisoners held in solitary confinement, but it’s far more than most of us realize. The striking prisoners had an effect, but they didn’t change the entire system. Yet what “The Strike” makes clear is that their collective action didn’t just make an incremental step toward better conditions for prisoners. In the end, it changed the way they saw the world, too."
Variety | By Dennis Harvey
“A strong case for human contact as essential to human existence.”
POV Magazine | By Liam Lacey
"The strength of Strike comes from the first-person accounts that humanize the participants—both the prisoners who speak candidly about the psychological damage of prolonged seclusion, and the officials who describe how they attempted to improve a dysfunctional organizational culture."
Laila Aziz, Community Organizer
"One of the most important pieces created in our movement.”
UCLA School of Law | Sharon Dolovich, Professor of Law
“It is hard to overstate how impactful and illuminating the event was for students."
Audience Member
“This film both broke and restored my faith in humanity all at once.”
LA Elements | Elva Zevallos
"The Strike succeeds in delivering an impact to the viewer that is powerfully emotional."
Keith Loves Movies | Pedro Lima
"It is an impactful film about human rights and the power of solidarity."
SK on Movies | By Sean Patrick Kelly
"One can only mention the mental toll it takes to spend years, let alone decades, in solitary confinement, where the prisoners resign themselves to death in a concrete box. This probably helps to make The Strike an inspirational story, as the prisoners within the Pelican Bay SHU decided to do something about their situation. The end result is a documentary worth checking out."
Set the Bar | Robert K Stephen (CSW)
"A fascinating study of the debilitating effects of solitary confinement in the prison system and the political football game played by California politicians and CDC bureaucrats."
Unseen Films | Steve Kopian
"No matter where you stand on criminal justice you need to see this film because it makes the discussion one you can relate to on a personal level."
NPR “Here and Now”
'The Strike' documentary tells of incarcerated peoples' protest against solitary confinement
LA Times | By Manuel Betancourt
A mass hunger strike transformed solitary confinement in California prisons. This documentary captures the fight
KQED | By Pendarvis Harshaw
In ‘The Strike,’ Filmmakers Illustrate the Issues With Solitary Confinement
Documentary Magazine | By Noel Ransome
“How Social Change Happens From Below”: Lucas Guilkey and JoeBill Muñoz Discuss ‘The Strike’
KQED Forum | By Alexis Madrigal
How a Massive California Prison Hunger Strike Overhauled Solitary Confinement
Letterboxd
Watchlist This! Our February 2025 picks of the best new bubbling-under films
Mission Local | By Andrew Gilbert
How a peaceful prison uprising ended torture in Pelican Bay
Vanguard News Group | David M. Greenwald
“The Strike” Wins First San Quentin Film Festival Award; Highlights Horrors of Solitary Confinement at Pelican Bay
KPFA Law and Disorder
New documentary ‘The Strike’ highlights historic hunger strike against solitary confinement
KPFA Hard Knock Radio
Unheard Voices: The Fight Against Solitary Confinement in The Strike
UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism
Alums JoeBill Muñoz and Lucas Guilkey produce ‘The Strike’ — highlighting historic uprising in a California supermax prison
Los Angeles Times | By Carlos Aguilar
8 Movies to Watch at This Year’s Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival
Awards Radar
Cine Las Americas 26th International Film Festival
Deadline | By Rosy Cordero
Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival Sets 2024 Lineup With 'In The Summers' To Open
WJTV
"The Strike": Witness the Untold Story of a Movement for change within Prison Walls
Screenfish
HotDocs '24: The Strike
CB Media Network
Interview of 'The Strike' directors JoeBill Munoz and Lucas Guilkey (Spotify)
Movie Pie
Hot Docs 2024 #8: Social Studies
SF Gate
Pass The Remote: Doclands In San Rafael Serves Up Adventure And More
Bay City News
New doc ‘The Strike’ details the prison hunger strike that made history
See Change
Ending Solitary Confinement: Documentary details largest hunger strike in U.S. history
Thirty Four Flavours
#HotDocs24 @hotdocs: The Strike
Movie Pie | By Vickie
Hot Docs 2024: Qs à la mode with Lucas Guilkey & JoeBill Muñoz (The Strike)
Marin IJ
5 interesting films with Marin ties coming to DocLands
AWARDS
Outstanding Crime and Justice Documentary | News & Documentary Emmy
Nominee, Outstanding Research: Documentary | News & Documentary Emmy
Nominee, Outstanding Sound: Documentary | News & Documentary Emmy
Nominee, Documentary | Peabody Awards
Best Documentary | Hot Docs Student Choice Awards
Best Documentary | Cine Las Americas Audience Awards
Nominee, Best Documentary | Imagen Awards
Anthem Gold Award for Human & Civil Rights: Documentary or Film | Anthem Awards
Finalist, Best Narratives and Best Documentaries of 2025 | Video Librarian
Nominee, Best Documentary Storytelling | Webbys
Nominee, Jury Award | Webbys
Nominee, People's Voice Award | Webbys