Absolutely, I was just wanting to not lose track of the original request. For example, I don’t really recall any “leisure” in Window Water Baby Moving, at least not as the original poster seemed to be looking for. Sorry about the tone of my original post; I have no intent to be the list police; just wanting to keep things useful for the question. But that’s not my place either.
Best regards, Adam On 5/13/14 3:43 PM, "Chuck Kleinhans" <[email protected]> wrote: > Perhaps you haven’t seen these films and don’t realize they also depict > leisure. > > > On May 13, 2014, at 10:53 AM, Adam Hyman <[email protected]> wrote: > >> The original request was :LABOR AND LEISURE TOGETHER." >> Not just "labor" >> >> >> On 5/13/14 8:17 AM, "Chuck Kleinhans" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> If we could think about domestic labor, there¹s a whole lot of other films, >>> many by women, to consider: >> >> Chantal Akerman, Jeanne Dielman 23 quai de >>> Commerce >> Gunvor Nelson and Dorothy Wiley, SCHMEERGUNTZ >> Carikee Schneenman, >>> Kitch¹s Last Meal >> Lizzie Borden, Working Girls >> Michelle Citron, Queer Fest >>> (interactive media) >> Marjorie Keller, Misconcneption (and many other films by >>> her) >> Joyce Weiland, Water Sark >> Chick Strand, Fake Fruit >> Laura Kipnis, Ecstasy >>> Unlimited >> >> >> and all birth films, even those made by men like Water Window Baby >>> Moving, contain representations of women¹s labor/women in labor >> >> >> and many >>> many more films if we think about women¹s emotional labor in dealing with >>> the >>> family, or a man >> >> Chuck Kleinhans
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