Motherland Cuba Korea USA screening with director Dai-sil Kim Gibson

Activity Type: 
Film
Date: 
Friday, April 8, 2011 - 19:30 to 00:00
Location: 
4130 Wesley W. Posvar Hall
Contact Person: 
Jennifer Murawski
Cost: 
Free

Speaker: Dai Sil Kim-Gibson, Filmmaker

Introduction by Prajna Parasher, Chatmham University

US/Cuba, 2006, 41 minutes, Spanish (with English subtitles).

How do we decide where is home? Feeling increasingly isolated in her adopted homeland, accomplished documentarian Dai Sil Kim-Gibson (SILENCE BROKEN: KOREAN COMFORT WOMEN) travels to Cuba to unearth stories from a relatively unknown group in the Asian diaspora. On the island, she meets Martha, a woman of Korean descent who identifies herself as Cuban. Like many of her contemporary countrymen and women, Martha possesses family ties that span multiple nations, cultures and politics. Her story inspires Kim-Gibson to travel to Miami to meet Martha's emigre sister and the rest of their multicultural family, in a journey that reveals how very different worldviews can co-exist in one family separated by place and ideology.

Asking probing questions about identity and economic and social justice, Kim-Gibson explores the ways in which we determine our ethnic, national, and cultural loyalties. The compelling stories in Motherland Cuba Korea USA weave a complex web and illuminate the search for an understanding of 'motherland' in a globalized society.

UCIS Unit: 
Asian Studies Center
Center for Latin American Studies
Global Studies Center
Non-University Sponsors: 
Office of the Provost
Humanities Center
College of Arts and Sciences