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4-day film-music package on caste-based discrimination

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Press Trust of India
Thought-provoking stories of the trials and resistance against caste-based discrimination are the focus of a four-day film and music package at the ongoing third edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB). Curated by noted film journalist Meenakshi Shedde, the package - titled 'The Die is Caste' - will start tomorrow at 6.30 pm, a KMB release said here today. The screenings and performances at the Pavilion in Cabral Yard, Fort Kochi, will be preceded by Q&A sessions moderated by Shedde.

'The Die is Caste' features four films exploring a number of narratives - romance, education, landlessness among others - but centred around the struggles of the marginalised castes.
 

The musical performances, which also feature a younger generation of revolutionary singers, delve into questions of origins and belonging, exploitation and resistance. "I chose to curate a package to show what we have become as a society. In many ways, Indians have become unspeakably savage in our outlook towards Dalits. As well, our ignorance of their lives is criminal," said Shedde, who is South Asia Consultant to the Berlin and Dubai Film Festivals. "If we knew about how the other India lives, we could be sensitive about other peoples' lives and fight their battles with them," he said.

Opening the package is Bikas Mishra's Chauranga (2014) - a feature in the Khortha language spoken in Jharkhand - which takes a look at education and love.

It will be followed by a performance by Tamil Parai artist Manimaran, his playback singer wife Magizhini and their sons Samaran and Iniyan.

Nagraj Manjule's critically-acclaimed Marathi film Sairat (2016) will be screening on Sunday, followed by performances by Dalit activist Bant Singh and his daughter Baljit Kaur. The Kannada-language feature, Chomana Dudi (1975), directed by B V Karanth on the injustice and hardships faced by landless, bonded labourers will be shown on January 9.

The package winds up with Agraharathil Kazhuthai (1977) - John Abraham's satirical take on Brahminical bigotry - on January 10 and would be followed by a performance on exploitation by the 18-member Karinthalakoottam folk troupe from Thrissur.

"These are rare films - some of which are made from life experiences. They are not only moving, but are also huge entertainers as in the case of Sairat. The Biennale - aptly located in Kerala, which is politically active, reflective and a region that fights for causes - is the best platform to showcase these films," Shedde is quoted as saying in the release.

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First Published: Jan 06 2017 | 8:29 PM IST

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