Women Documentary Filmmakers From the Region of Former Yugoslavia Lecturer: Masa Hilcisin October 10, 2009 Fall semester Department of Film Studies and Audiovisual Culture Masaryk University Reasons for choosing the subject: • Numerous women filmmakers appeared over the last two decades • Most of women filmmakers are not known outside of the region • There is a lack of researches, publishing, and studies of women’s work • Specific documentaristic focus on conflict and post-conflict period Political landscape of Yugoslavia during the 1990s: In 1991 and 1992, peaking conflicts led to war and the final split of Yugoslavia into seven independent states: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro, Kosovo, and Serbia Political landscape of Yugoslavia during the 1990s: • Slovenia and Croatia were the first to break up away which led to to war in Croatia from 1991 to 1995 between Croatian polices forces and Serbs • Around 20,000 killed or missing people during the war in Croatia • 196,000 displaced persons after the war in Croatia • By 1992 a further conflict had broken out in Bosnia, which had also declared independence • Capital Sarajevo was under siege during the war in Bosnia which lasts from 1992 to 1995 • Total of 102,622 civilians and soldiers have been killed during the war in Bosnia • 13 000 people still missing in Bosnia • In 1998 escalating of violence in Kosovo led to war between majority ethnic Albanians and Serbian rule • Nato air strikes against Yugoslavia in 1999, the first attack on sovereign European country in the alliance's history • The Assembly of Kosovo approved declaration of independence in February 2008 • Major outbreak of inter-ethnic violence in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in 2001, again involving the Albanian minority • Conflict in Macedonia was contained by Nato peacekeepers • On June 2006 the Parliament of Montenegro declared the independence of Montenegro General characteristics of the documentary film scene in the region of former Yugoslavia from 1990s till today: • Production of documentary films mainly financed and supported by various international funds, Ministries of cultural affairs, and state televisions • Numerous independent film productions have been established: B92, Film Focus, Factum, SaGA, XY Films, Bela Film General caracteristics of the documentary film scene in the region of former Yugoslavia from 1990s till today: • Significant film festivals happening in the region • Serbia: • FEST – The Belgrade International Film Festival http://www.britfilms.com • Belgrade Documentary and Short Film Festival http://www.kratkimetar.rs • Student Film Festival Belgrade General characteristics of the documentary film scene in the region of former Yugoslavia from 1990s till today: • Bosnia and Herzegovina: • Sarajevo Film Festival (www.sff.ba) • Human Rights Film Festival (www.pravoljudski.org) • Slovenia: • International Documentary Film Festival in Ljubljana (http://en.liffe.si) • International Student Film and Video Festival – Filofest (www.filofest.com) General characteristics of the documentary film scene in the region of former Yugoslavia from 1990s till today: • Croatia: • ZagrebDox Film Festival (www.zagrebdox.net) • Liburnia Film Festival of the national documentary production (www.liburniafilmfestival.com) • Motovun Film Festival (www.motovunfilmfestival.com) • Zagreb Film Festival (www.zagrebfilmfestival.com) General characteristics of the documentary film scene in the region of former Yugoslavia from 1990s till today: •Macedonia: •Festival of European Film – Cinedays (www.cinedays.com) •Skopje Film Festival (www.skopjefilmfestival.com) •AsterFest (http://asterfest.rastko.net) •Kosovo: •Dokufest (www.dokufest.com) •Pristine International Film Festival – PriFilmFest (www.prifilmfest.org) •Montenegro: •International TV Festival Bar (http://tvfestbar.com) Beginning of 1990s • Gordana Boškov (Serbia) ‘Dinastija Karađorđević’ (Dynasty of Karadjordjevic) 1990 Reading to war... • Vesna Ljubić (B&H) ‘Ecce Homo’ (Behold the Man) 1994 • Jasmila Žbanić (B&H) ‘After, After’ 1997 ‘Crvene gumene čizme’ (Red Rubber Boots) 2000 • Biljana Čakić Veselić (Croatia) ‘Dečko kojem se žurilo’ (The Boy Who Rushed) 2002 • Jasmina Tešanović (Serbia) ‘Jasmina i rat’ (Jasmina’s Diary) 1999 Reading to war... • Maja Weiss (Slovenia/Germany) ‘Cesta bratstva i jednistva’ (The Road of Fraternity and Unity) 1999 • Petra Seliskar (Slovenia) ‘The Grandmothers of Revolution’ (2006) • Lidija Zelović (B&H/Holland) ‘My Friends’ (2007) ART for The World • Born under the auspices of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights • Long feature composed by 22 short movies by filmmakers and artists from all over the world • Each short (documentary, fiction, drama, comedy, etc) is based on one of the major themes highlighted in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Literature • Iordanova, Dina. Cinema of Flame – Balkan Film, Culture and the Media, London: British Film Institute, 2001 • Todorova, Maria. Imagining the Balkans, New York: Oxford University Press, 1997 • Aitken, Ian. Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film. London: Routledge, 2005 • Bajevic, Maja. Women at Work. Sarajevo: Art Gallery of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2002 • Hawkesworth, Celia. Voices in the Shadows: Women and Verbal Art in Serbia and Bosnia. Budapest: CEU, 2000 • Husanovic, Jasmina. At the Interstices of Past, Present, and Future: Politics of Witnessing in Bosnia and Cultural-Artistic Practices of Traversal in almanac Leap Into the City. Cultural Positions, Political Conditions, New York: DAP, 2006 • Renov, Michael. The Subject of Documentary. London: University of Minnesota Press, 2004 • Renov, Michael. Theorizing documentary. New York: Routledge, 1993