Speaking of social problems, is Al Gore's movie available in video?  I would 
show that in my social problems class. I have used, Children in America's 
Schools based on Kozol's Savage Inequalities. It can be purchased thru CETV. 





>>> "Peter Grahame" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 07/20/06 10:54 AM >>>
Hi. Stephen Sweet's film list reminded me that I would like to get some 
suggestions for films for a Social Problems course. Actually most of the films 
in his list would be suitable, but I would like to get other suggestions as 
well. Thanks!
Peter Grahame
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Stephen Sweet 
  To: [email protected] 
  Cc: Joshua Mumm 
  Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 11:21 AM
  Subject: TEACHSOC: work-family documentaries - thanks to all who helped!


  Greetings All-
  Some time back I asked for your ideas of films suited to teaching work-family 
courses.  We thought you would like to see the compendium that members of the 
list help construct (we are focusing on identifying documentaries....but 
couldn't resist putting in Chaplin's Modern Times).  If you have another 
favorite, by all means, please do share.  We still have about a week where-in 
we can enter them in our  ASA Resource Manual.  Thanks to all who helped!
  -steve sweet





  FILMS ON WORK-FAMILY


  Modern Times (1936) - by Charlie Chaplin (Warner Home Video, orig. released 
1936)

              "A devastating satire on the effects of mass production on the 
lives of factory workers. Shows Charlie as a factory worker, jailbird, night 
watchman, and a singing waiter. Primarily a silent film with music and sound 
effects, but voices emanate from TV sets and radios." - Abstract

  Juggling Work and Family (2001) - by Hedrick Smith (Films for the Humanities 
and Sciences)

              "Juggling Work and Family focuses on the increasing tensions 
between workplace expectations and family needs. The traditional family with a 
stay-at-home mother and working father has been replaced by the growing number 
of single parents and dual-career couples. In this fast-paced new economy, 
Americans are feeling the stress of working more and have less time than ever 
for their family. This program looks at how working parents in various 
occupations across the country are trying to reconcile work and family 
conflicts. The program explores how companies and unions are seeking to ease 
the work-family conflict with child care centers, subsidies, and alternative 
work schedules that include part-time work, job-sharing, and telecommuting. 
Experts analyze the problems, address solutions, and pose the question: what 
else can be done?" - Abstract

  Stolen Childhoods (2003) - by Galen Films and Romano Productions

              "Stolen Childhoods is a feature length documentary on child 
labor. The story is told in the words of laboring children, their parents, and 
the people working daily to help them. Children share their experiences of 
exploitation and their hopes for better life and future... Filmed in seven 
countries; Brazil, India, the United States, Mexico, Indonesia, Kenya and 
Nepal, stolen childhoods examines the cost of child labor to the global 
community, probes the causes of this complex phenomenon and recommends actions 
that can be taken to eliminate this gross human rights violation in our 
lifetime" - Container.

  Women, war and work: shaping space for productivity in the shipyards during 
the Second World War (1994) - by Victoria O'Donnel and Paul Monaco (KUSM-TV 
Montana Public Television)

              "Documents the growth and demise of Vanport City, Oregon, a 
community built to house workers for the Kaiser shipyards during WWII and 
subsequently dismantled after the war." - Abstract

  Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (1980) - dir. Connie Field (Clarity Films)

              "The U.S. entry into World War II created an unprecedented demand 
for new workers. After whirlwind training, women found themselves doing "men's 
work" and they did it so well that production levels rose despite the military 
call-up of millions of male workers. When the war was over, Rosie wanted to 
stay. But neither the structure of the American economy nor the dominant view 
of women's place in society sustained such hopes. This story is told by the 
women themselves -five former "Rosies" who movingly recall their histories 
working in Detroit, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco during the war. 
Their testimony is interwoven with rare archival recruitment films, stills, 
posters, ads, and music from the period which contrast their experiences with 
the popular legend and mythology of Rosie the Riveter." - Abstract

   The Occupation: A Film About the Harvard Living Wage Sit-In (2003) - dir. 
Maple Raza and Pancho Velez (EnMasse Films)

              "During the time that the university's endowment tripled and it 
enjoyed a more than $100-million budget surplus, it busted unions and cut the 
pay and benefits of its lowest paid and most vulnerable workers. Students 
organized a living-wage action which culminated in an occupation of the 
president's building and national attention to their cause. It became part of a 
national movement on university campuses for living wages for non-faculty 
workers. These kids fought the Man--and they won!" (Review from ifilm.com)

    
  Strange Justice (1999) - dir. Ernest R. Dickerson (Paramount)

              "Fact-based story about the sexual harassment suit filed by Anita 
Hill (Regina Taylor) during the appointment trials of Clarence Thomas (Delroy 
Lindo) for the Supreme Court during the George Bush presidential 
administration. The film gives both parties a fairly even presentation and does 
not try to assess blame. It does, however, show a lot of background political 
maneuvering that took place, particularly on the part of Kenneth Duberstein 
(Mandy Patinkin), an administrative spin doctor." (Review from Amazon.com)


  Affluenza (1997) - by John De Graaf (KTCS Seatle and Oregon Public 
Broadcasting)

              "A one-hour television special that explores the high social and 
environmental costs of materialism and overconsumption." (Lonnie Golden, from 
Syllabus)


  Escape from Affluenza (1998) - by John De Graaf (KTCS Seatle and Oregon 
Public Broadcasting)

               "The solution-oriented sequel, profiling people and 
organizations that are reducing consumption and waste, choosing work that 
reflects their values and working to live in better balance." (Lonnie Golden, 
from Syllabus)


  Chain of Love (2001) - by Marije Meerman (First Run/Icarus Films)

              A film about the Philippines' second largest export product - 
maternal love - and how this export affects the women involved, their families 
in the Philippines, and families in the West. (Rec. by Christine McKenna)

  Website: http://www.frif.com/new2002/chain.html



  Maid in America (2003) - by Anayansi Prado, prod. Kevin Leedingham (Impacto 
Films)

              An intimate look into the lives of three Latina immigrants 
working as nannies and housekeepers in Los Angeles, three of the nearly 100,000 
domestic workers living in that city today. (Rec. by Christine McKenna)

  Website: http://www.wmm.com/filmcatalog/pages/c664.shtml



  With Babies and Banners (1978) - by Lorraine Gray, prod. Lyn Goldfarb, Ann 
Bohlen (New Day Films)

              "The victory of the Great General Motors Sit-Down Strike in 
Flint, Michigan, in 1937 was the key to the success of the CIO's drive for 
industrial unionism. The now classic With Babies and Banners presents the 
untold story of the women--the working women, wives, mothers and sisters--who 
became the backbone of the strike. Forty years later, nine of these women 
reunite and dramatically show the relevance of their experience for working men 
and women today." (Review from www.newday.com)

    <>
  Wage Slaves (2002) - dir. Richard Ross (A&E) 
              "Originally telecast as a two-hour entry in the A&E cable 
documentary series Investigative Reports, Nickel and Dimed in America is based 
on the similarly titled best-seller by Barbara Ehrenreich. The program 
chronicles the struggle of America's "working poor" to make ends meet in an 
increasingly (and often prohibitively) expensive society. Emphasis is placed 
upon five workers, most of them single parents, trying to survive on salaries 
ranging from six to seven dollars hourly. Much of the air time is given over to 
the ongoing debate about increasing the national minimum wage and improving the 
working conditions of those in the lowest financial brackets. Nickel and Dimed 
in America was first broadcast in 2002."  (Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide)

    <>
  Brats: Growing Up Military (An Intimate Portrait of a Lost American Tribe) 
(2004) - by Donna Musil (Brats Productions, Inc./ Image FIlm & Video Center) 
              For more information, visit http://www.tckworld.com/thebratsfilm.

    <>
  The Farmer's Wife (1998) - by David & Nancy Sutherland (David Sutherland 
Productions, Inc. and FRONTLINE with Independent Television Service (ITVS)) 
              "Acclaimed filmmaker David Sutherland takes us deep inside the 
passionate, yet troubled, marriage of Juanita and Darrel Buschkoetter, a young 
farm couple in rural Nebraska facing the loss of everything they hold dear. 
Part 1 of 'The Farmer's Wife' recounts the moving story of Juanita and Darrel's 
romantic love affair and begins the journey to the core of their emotional 
struggles, which have pushed their marriage to the brink. Darrel and Juanita 
tell their own story, in their own words, without the intrusion of a narrator. 
It unfolds before our eyes, as it is happening. 

              In Part 2 of 'The Farmer's Wife,' the camera focuses on the 
rhythms of everyday life on the Buschkoetters' farm. We follow Juanita, Darrel, 
and their three girls through days reminiscent of a forgotten, simpler time in 
America. In September, an early frost destroys thirty percent of their crop. 
Darrel must go to work at a nearby farm for seven dollars an hour and does his 
own farming at night. Juanita cleans houses while trying to get a college 
degree so Darrel can stay home and farm, but Darrel worries that if she goes 
off the farm she'll find something she likes better. By Christmas, they are 
dead broke and unsure of their future. 

              In the concluding episode of 'The Farmer's Wife,' Darrel finally 
harvests the bumper crop he had dreamt about his whole life. But Darrel has to 
go to work for another farmer to make enough money to feed his family, and the 
stress and exhaustion cause him to explode. In December, Juanita takes the 
girls and leaves for a week--it has a deep and profound effect on Darrel. Two 
months later, the marriage that had seemed almost doomed is miraculously 
transformed. Through counseling, Darrel learns to deal with his anger and 
undergoes extraordinary personal growth. Now he is the at-home parent, farming 
and caring for his three daughters. Juanita, who has earned a college degree, 
works at a respected crop insurance company in town, helping other farmers." 
(review from PBS.org)

    <>
  Fast Food Women (1991) - by Anne Lewis (Appalshop Film & Video) 
              "Fast Food Women takes an inside look at the lives of the women 
who fry chicken, make pizzas, and flip burgers at four different fast food 
restaurants in eastern Kentucky. These women, mostly middle-aged and raising 
children, are often the sole income source for their families. They work for 
wages barely above the minimum wage, have trouble getting full-time hours 
because of their employers' scheduling policies, and are without health care 
and other benefits.

              Analysis by Barbara Garson (author of The Electronic Sweatshop) 
of the way fast food jobs systematically dehumanize and devalue the worker is 
intercut with comments from human resources managers at the Druther's chain. 
Scenes of women at work round out this incisive, sometimes troubling look at 
life on the other side of the counter. A useful introduction to economic 
conditions in contemporary America, Fast Food Women is recommended for 
discussion of the changing roles of women and the changing face of the American 
workplace." (review from buyindies.com)


  Beyond the Glass Ceiling...(info still to be added)


  
  




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