The
Institute and filmmaker Paul
Wagner are working on two film projects: Faith
in the Hood and The Great Democratic Revolution.
Faith in the Hood
Faith in the Hood is a documentary film series
about churches and faith-based organizations in “Southeast,” the
poorest community in Washington, D.C., and the people
they serve.
Part II will utilize film
footage of a wide range of churches and organizations
in Southeast, including Afro-centric Christian and Muslim
denominations, and will incorporate commentary from leading
scholars and commentators on the role of faith in inner
city communities like Southeast.
The Great Democratic Revolution
The Great Democratic Revolution is a series of films, inspired by Alexis de Tocqueville’s classic work Democracy in America, that examines the prospects and challenges for both emerging and established democracies in the world today.
The first installment, 1989: Learning the Art of Freedom, focuses on the Eastern European events of 1989 and the preceding years that contributed to such vast political change. The film tells the story of 1989, not from the omniscient eye of an historian, but from the dynamic perspective of the actors in that story. An oral history of democracy activists, with a particular focus on Poland and Czechoslovakia, the film interweaves interviews with contextual material, archival footage, and narration, to present this story of (as Tocqueville might have described it) a “democratic revolution”—one that might still be in process.
Joshua Yates
(434) 924-7705 | Email
Paul
Wagner is
an Academy Award-winning filmmaker best known for his
documentaries about American history and culture. They
include Out of Ireland: The Story of Irish Emigration
to America; Miles of Smiles: The Untold Story
of the Pullman Porters; and The Stone Carvers,
a film about Italian-American craftsmen that won the
Academy Award for Best Short Documentary. |