The Bookworm at Sanlitun was host to Chapter Four titled 'Crash and Burn'.
Approximately 35 people attended the evening hosted by Laetitia Gauden from Imagine Gallery and supported by Jennifer Niven at The Bookworm.
Interesting that the questions about sexual abuse were to direct to start discussion, people didn't at all go with it and they switched immediately the discussion about the way Jennifer is filming and the way she manages her life and about differences between pleasure and love.
It may be because the audience was mixed gender, we do not know.
Keep tuned for Chapter Five.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Thursday, March 26, 2009
CHAPTER THREE AT YINYANG COMMUNITY CENTRE
The image at the Yinyang Community Centre shows people involved with the Chapter. Much laughter on occassions, particularly popular is the section on discussing female masturbation in India.
Jennifer fox in this section does find time for herself with a friend (female).
The group, certainly a mix of cultures, ages and a lone male who stayed for the entire screening.
DISCUSSION SPARKS
Jennifer has a secret lover and a boyfriend. What sexual values in different cultures are paramount?
Although there is an underlying rule never take a married lover, is there more OR less ‘freedom’ risk in this type of affair?
• How is the image of woman constructed in your society? Why is calling someone a “whore” the ultimate insult? • Discuss how the words whore and bitches are currently utilized in your culture.
DISCUSSION SPARKS • What do you know about India? • What are the sources of your information? How credible or comprehensive are those sources? • How did this segment challenge or affirm what you believed to be true about India?
Audience response was robust, lively and brought out personal preferences and discussion on Social structures, historical and contemporary.
Jennifer fox in this section does find time for herself with a friend (female).
The group, certainly a mix of cultures, ages and a lone male who stayed for the entire screening.
DISCUSSION SPARKS
Jennifer has a secret lover and a boyfriend. What sexual values in different cultures are paramount?
Although there is an underlying rule never take a married lover, is there more OR less ‘freedom’ risk in this type of affair?
• How is the image of woman constructed in your society? Why is calling someone a “whore” the ultimate insult? • Discuss how the words whore and bitches are currently utilized in your culture.
DISCUSSION SPARKS • What do you know about India? • What are the sources of your information? How credible or comprehensive are those sources? • How did this segment challenge or affirm what you believed to be true about India?
Audience response was robust, lively and brought out personal preferences and discussion on Social structures, historical and contemporary.
CHAPTER TWO AT HUANGHUA STUDIO
The screening of chapter two at Huanghua studio had an audience including two males and filmmaking students from Tsinghua University.
One male received a telephone call and had to leave, then the second said he was hungry and left with his girlfriend.
What is interesting about the chapters is that stimulating and cross discussions take place once the audience are free to say whatever they choose.
I proposed discussion questions and the discussion takes on a life of its own.
Debates on the issues flow back and forth until there is quietness and they are thanked for their input.
These questions were the discussion sparks for this Chapter:
The three influential women in Jennifer’s life said don’t get married, in their perspective would this also mean don’t have children?
Does a woman need ‘a husband’ to have children?
• How does reproduction limit women’s choices? • Beyond biology, what makes someone “ready” to have a child? • How does thinking of oneself as “ready” differ for women and men?
One male received a telephone call and had to leave, then the second said he was hungry and left with his girlfriend.
What is interesting about the chapters is that stimulating and cross discussions take place once the audience are free to say whatever they choose.
I proposed discussion questions and the discussion takes on a life of its own.
Debates on the issues flow back and forth until there is quietness and they are thanked for their input.
These questions were the discussion sparks for this Chapter:
The three influential women in Jennifer’s life said don’t get married, in their perspective would this also mean don’t have children?
Does a woman need ‘a husband’ to have children?
• How does reproduction limit women’s choices? • Beyond biology, what makes someone “ready” to have a child? • How does thinking of oneself as “ready” differ for women and men?
Thursday, March 12, 2009
CHAPTER ONE AT THE HUTONG
The Hutong is a quaint Cultural Exchange Centre South of Yonghegong (Lama Temple).
About 12 people came along to the first screening titled 'No Fear of Flying'.
As we waited for the audience to arrive introductions circled through the group.
People from South Africa, China, France, Greece and Australia drank tea and watched the film.
Jennifer offers a very indepth educational guide to the film and the six Chapters, available on her website.
Discussion Sparks throughout the guide ask questions with respect to issues, situations and aspects of the film.
After reading the Brief I posed my own questions.
Jennifer refers to her father as being 'Free'. He left the house everyday and did the things he wanted to do, whereas her mother with five children was tied to the washing machine and domestic duties.
Jennifer wanted to be like her father, to be 'free'.
I asked: "What is freedom? Is one ever 'truly free' of any commitments?
The discussion went around with input from various of the women. Freedom is having choice, to be able to make choices and decisions about ones own life. Although commitments in many forms exist, even for the single mid career woman, she can choose to stay with a commitment or not. Freedom is not necessarily being or not being married or in a relationship, it is often within the person and having an attitude to make their own choices. Freedom was described as perhaps being in the sky in a plane OR like a bird that can 'take off' and go wherever it chooses. One woman wish to travel to experience life in other countries with other cultures and thought she would not marry until later. she married at 23 but decided not to have children because of her wish to travel. Her husband asked why then did she marry which made her stop and decide that marriage also did not fit into her plans.
About 12 people came along to the first screening titled 'No Fear of Flying'.
As we waited for the audience to arrive introductions circled through the group.
People from South Africa, China, France, Greece and Australia drank tea and watched the film.
Jennifer offers a very indepth educational guide to the film and the six Chapters, available on her website.
Discussion Sparks throughout the guide ask questions with respect to issues, situations and aspects of the film.
After reading the Brief I posed my own questions.
Jennifer refers to her father as being 'Free'. He left the house everyday and did the things he wanted to do, whereas her mother with five children was tied to the washing machine and domestic duties.
Jennifer wanted to be like her father, to be 'free'.
I asked: "What is freedom? Is one ever 'truly free' of any commitments?
The discussion went around with input from various of the women. Freedom is having choice, to be able to make choices and decisions about ones own life. Although commitments in many forms exist, even for the single mid career woman, she can choose to stay with a commitment or not. Freedom is not necessarily being or not being married or in a relationship, it is often within the person and having an attitude to make their own choices. Freedom was described as perhaps being in the sky in a plane OR like a bird that can 'take off' and go wherever it chooses. One woman wish to travel to experience life in other countries with other cultures and thought she would not marry until later. she married at 23 but decided not to have children because of her wish to travel. Her husband asked why then did she marry which made her stop and decide that marriage also did not fit into her plans.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Dates and Venues:
Part 1:
Thursday 12, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8.30 pm
at The Hutong
Address: 1 Jiu Dao Wan Zhong Xiang Hutong, Dongcheng district
Tel: 8915 3613
info@the-hutong.com
www.the-hutong.com
Dinner: The Hutong fresh seasonal modern Chinese cuisine:
Menu for Film Night 6.15pm for sit down meal
- Cumin lamb burgers with spicy pear and goji berry chutney
- Dry fried tofu with coriander and cashew relish
- Steamed Perch with ginger and Thai Galangal with touches of coconut
- Buc Choy in Wine based tofu sauce
- Crisp green shoots with Sichuan Pepper corn infused sausage
- Daoist 4 Seed Rice
- Coconut Creme Brulee
70 RMB for dishes
20 RMB desert
Wine List will be provided with drinks available for purchase
Ring for Bookings
Part 2:
Thursday 19, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8:30 pm
at Huanghua Studio
Address: No. D18, Beijing Guoji Yishuying / BIAC (Beijing International Art Camp), Suojiacun, Laiguangyingdonglu, Chaoyang district
Tel: 6435 3174 / 13439058991
E: denisekeeleb@yahoo.com.au
www.denisekeele-bedford.com
Dinner: Tong Da Restaurant, Laiguangyingdonglu chaoyang district, two kilometres from Huanghua Studio offer meals before or after the screening.
Part 3:
Thursday 26, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8:30 pm
at The Yin Yang Community Center
Address: The First Courtyard, Hegezhuang, Chaoyang district
Tel: 6431 2108
E: contact@yinyangbeijing.com
www.yinyangbeijing.com
Dinner: The Orchard Restaurant opposite Yinyang Community Centre serve meals from 6pm.
Bookings can be made through Rachael on 6431 2108.
Part 4:
Thursday 2nd, April 2009, from 7.15 for 7.30 start
at The Bookworm in Sanlitun,
Address: Building 4, Nan Sanlitun Road, Chaoyang district
Tel: 65869507
www.chinabookworm.com
Tickets for the event at 30rmb and 20rmb for members of The Bookworm, available 2 weeks in advance. Tickets include a glass of wine or beer or softs. 'please purchase a ticket in advance'
Part 5:
Thursday 9th, April 2009, from 7.15 to 8.30pm
at Timezone8,
Address: 798 Dashanzi, No. 4 Jiu Xian Qiao Lu, Chaoyang district
Tel: 5978 9072
www.timezone8.com
Dinner: Available at timezone 8. They offer three menus 58rmb, 98rmb and 138rmb.
Please Ring for bookings on 5978 9072
Part 6:
Thursday 16th, April 2009, 7.15.to 8.30pm
at Imagine Gallery,
Address: No. 8 Feijiacun Yishu Gongzuoshi, feijiacun
Laigunagyingdonglu, Chaoyang district,
Tel: 64385747/13910917965
Email: laetitia.gauden@imagine-gallery.com
www.imagine-gallery.com
Dinner: Tong Da Restaurant, Laiguangyingdonglu chaoyang district, at the top end of Imagine Gallery Street offer meals before or after the screening.
Information on Nu Yishu series IV: Nu red can be found at:
http://nuyishu.blogspot.com/2009/02/introduction.html
AND
www.imagine-gallery.com
Thursday 12, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8.30 pm
at The Hutong
Address: 1 Jiu Dao Wan Zhong Xiang Hutong, Dongcheng district
Tel: 8915 3613
info@the-hutong.com
www.the-hutong.com
Dinner: The Hutong fresh seasonal modern Chinese cuisine:
Menu for Film Night 6.15pm for sit down meal
- Cumin lamb burgers with spicy pear and goji berry chutney
- Dry fried tofu with coriander and cashew relish
- Steamed Perch with ginger and Thai Galangal with touches of coconut
- Buc Choy in Wine based tofu sauce
- Crisp green shoots with Sichuan Pepper corn infused sausage
- Daoist 4 Seed Rice
- Coconut Creme Brulee
70 RMB for dishes
20 RMB desert
Wine List will be provided with drinks available for purchase
Ring for Bookings
Part 2:
Thursday 19, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8:30 pm
at Huanghua Studio
Address: No. D18, Beijing Guoji Yishuying / BIAC (Beijing International Art Camp), Suojiacun, Laiguangyingdonglu, Chaoyang district
Tel: 6435 3174 / 13439058991
E: denisekeeleb@yahoo.com.au
www.denisekeele-bedford.com
Dinner: Tong Da Restaurant, Laiguangyingdonglu chaoyang district, two kilometres from Huanghua Studio offer meals before or after the screening.
Part 3:
Thursday 26, March 2009, from 7:15 to 8:30 pm
at The Yin Yang Community Center
Address: The First Courtyard, Hegezhuang, Chaoyang district
Tel: 6431 2108
E: contact@yinyangbeijing.com
www.yinyangbeijing.com
Dinner: The Orchard Restaurant opposite Yinyang Community Centre serve meals from 6pm.
Bookings can be made through Rachael on 6431 2108.
Part 4:
Thursday 2nd, April 2009, from 7.15 for 7.30 start
at The Bookworm in Sanlitun,
Address: Building 4, Nan Sanlitun Road, Chaoyang district
Tel: 65869507
www.chinabookworm.com
Tickets for the event at 30rmb and 20rmb for members of The Bookworm, available 2 weeks in advance. Tickets include a glass of wine or beer or softs. 'please purchase a ticket in advance'
Part 5:
Thursday 9th, April 2009, from 7.15 to 8.30pm
at Timezone8,
Address: 798 Dashanzi, No. 4 Jiu Xian Qiao Lu, Chaoyang district
Tel: 5978 9072
www.timezone8.com
Dinner: Available at timezone 8. They offer three menus 58rmb, 98rmb and 138rmb.
Please Ring for bookings on 5978 9072
Part 6:
Thursday 16th, April 2009, 7.15.to 8.30pm
at Imagine Gallery,
Address: No. 8 Feijiacun Yishu Gongzuoshi, feijiacun
Laigunagyingdonglu, Chaoyang district,
Tel: 64385747/13910917965
Email: laetitia.gauden@imagine-gallery.com
www.imagine-gallery.com
Dinner: Tong Da Restaurant, Laiguangyingdonglu chaoyang district, at the top end of Imagine Gallery Street offer meals before or after the screening.
Information on Nu Yishu series IV: Nu red can be found at:
http://nuyishu.blogspot.com/2009/02/introduction.html
AND
www.imagine-gallery.com
Monday, February 16, 2009
INTRODUCTION
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
FLYING: CONFESSIONS OF FREE WOMAN is a six-part series that takes a personal experimental approach to female life in the 21st century. The series narratively and visuallyinterweaves aspects of filmmaker Jennifer Fox’s own life over three years – from 42 to 45 -with the lives of diverse and courageous women from around the globe. In ways that are both humorous and profound, the film searches for new models of femaleness, examining changinggender roles and the efforts of women everywhere to comprehend and define for themselveswhat it means to be a woman in these times. What are the struggles of women in this era of new sexual and economic freedoms, shifting gender relations, a rise in religiousfundamentalism, and AIDS? What have been their journeys to self-definition and self-expression? Are they winning or losing in their own eyes? Have things really changed between men and women? And is there a new model of the female that we can now begin todefine? Never before in our collective human history have so many women had such freedom toconstruct a life of their own creation. Yet old structures and realities still haunt us; manywomen are looking for new role models, but finding them difficult to identify for lack of precedent and because even today women so often remain the invisible, silent class. Whilesocial constructs isolate us into subgroups, many women of all ages, classes, and culturesaround the world express surprisingly similar concerns and struggles. From South Africa to California, from Sweden to India, the film creates a cross-cultural story about commonexperiences of modern female life on issues such as love, socialization, marriage, work,childrearing, aging, violence, spirituality, death, politics. The series takes as a hypothesis that owning and controlling one’s own sexuality is the centerof a woman’s power and self. It also hypothesizes that the inverse is true: if a woman does notcontrol the emotional and sexual life of her own body, she cannot be fully empowered. With all the advances that women have made for themselves, patriarchal systems still exists acrossthe globe. Rarely is a woman fully in control of her own body or her own fate. Often and insome cultures, the subjugation is overt—female genital mutilation, the veil, lack of access to abortion, dowry, and rape as a tool of warfare. Just as often it is insidious—socialcondemnation of women who take joy in their sexuality, harassment defended as “harmless”flirtation, legislation prohibiting sexual education in schools and the consequences of the subsequent lack of knowledge, the equation of “female” or “feminine” with weak, incompetent or emotionally volatile.The reality is that the dangers and obstacles women face in their journey to womanhood transcend most boundaries. For women from European capitals to Saharan villages--regardless of socio-economic status, class, race, nationality or religion--claiming one’ssexuality and pleasure is a hard-fought, silent battle from childhood into old age. It requires confronting the internal and external mores placed on our pleasure by nearly every religious,societal and family system that exists. It also requires dealing with the constant threat andreality of physical violence, including domestic violence, sexual abuse and sexual disease. The ownership of one’s own sexuality is rarely discussed in the home, in public forums or in themedia, leaving women and girls with little information and few choices. How can girls andwomen safely find their way? The filmmaker postulates that much of what makes up the lives of modern women often goesunnamed, unacknowledged, and unspoken. There is a secret world women move in. Whereverthey go, there is a code that we speak, a membership we belong to by mere existence. Silently, effortlessly, and when no one is looking we slip into "woman-speak," the language ofthe marginalized, encoded since our birth. This film will attempt to enter into this secret worldof women's language, relationships, survival techniques and lives, in the hopes of charting a truer picture of modern female life and sharing that with women and men across the globe. Toexamine these complex threads of female life requires a new filmmaking methodology that willmake visible the hidden and mirror some of the new dynamics women are creating in their lives.FLYING takes an experimental narrative approach, employing new innovative techniques that reflect the interactions unique to women. Subjects explore a new way of expression by“passing the camera” between the so-called filmmaker and the so-called film subject duringthe filmed conversations. This methodology directly addresses the imbalance of power that so many documentarians struggle with, as famously posited by Susan Sontag in On Photography:“To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself into a certainrelation to the world that feels like knowledge -- and, therefore, like power.” By passing the camera, the traditional idea of the interview is dropped as roles are rotated at all times to mirrorthe relationship that women have with each other and our unique, circular way of figuring outour lives through sharing and dialogue. The camera becomes a tool that deepens conversation and intimacy between filmmaker and subject – rather than a tool of separation, objectificationand power. Boundaries are broken; the subject becomes both participant and creator.
This new technique is employed around the world in search of the meaning of modern femalelife. The camera is “passed” with other women (and men) while in motion on planes, trains,cars; inside their homes, in intimate environments such as bedrooms or kitchens; or in public, in places such as bars or restaurants or in the park. These conversations are married to scenes of the selected women in the spaces where they feel they "put their lives together" and make themselves whole. Spaces such as their workplace – midwife, teacher, designer, doctor,manager, waitress, musician, cleaner, writer, therapist, filmmaker; or in their hobbies, such asdance, sculpting, running, or listening to music; or in their relationships with their partners, their children, or their dogs. Often conversations take place around food – preparing food, and eatingfood – where the best talks usually take place. While it is impossible to be comprehensive in the representation of women, Fox has interviewedand built relationships with women representing a diverse range of class, race, nationality,religion, orientation, and age. Fox has invested the time necessary to build trust, and the intimacy the film captures reflects carefully nurtured relationships. She has been travelingwidely, returning multiple times to countries to be with women as their stories unfold, as a trueconfidante. For example, during the past three years, Fox has made countless trips to South Africa, where she has created lifelong friendships with women who were strangers before thestart of this production. Fox has visited diverse parts of the USA, Britain, France, Finland,Lapland, Bosnia, India, Russia, Argentina, Pakistan, Venezuela, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, South Africa, and Cambodia.Fox’s travels have taken her around the world and into the lives of women who, with no map or known destination, are testing boundaries and forging new spaces for themselves. Fox is onher own personal journey to figure out how she fits into the world as a single, working, sexual,childless woman. Along the way, she is also trying to figure out whether she wants children, confronting the possibility that she has waited too long to conceive, and grappling with whetherto adopt. Hidden behind her white, middle class American background, Fox shares many ofthe struggles of women around the world that allow her to connect with the women she meets: she has had to work hard to overcome the traditional values with which she grew up and tonavigate the social mores imposed on all women. She herself was sexually abused as a youngteenager, was almost raped later in life. Her quest will provide a narrative thread through the stories of other women she meets.All of the women have been filmed in an attempt to answer the intense narrative question: What does it mean to be free? How are we contesting the prescriptions of the status quo, consciouslyor unconsciously, out of necessity or out of desire? How are we reinventing both ourselves andthe very idea of being a woman? The series circles back and forth between the filmmaker’s story and the stories of other women. This theme of "passing back and forth" and its circularmetaphor will permeate the film and the images. The series is a combination of hand-heldroving images, intense conversations, visual food orgies, intimate group conversations, and changing landscapes as the filmmaker roams the world and meets up with various women.Together, filmmaker and participants will discuss and share the struggles and stories of modernlife in pursuit of some definition of this strange new world.
By examining the myriad paths available to women today, the obstacles that still exist, and the consequences of our choices, viewers are challenged to reexamine their own paths andchoices. This experimental and experiential drama will be a collective search to make sense ofbeing a woman in the modern world.
FLYING: CONFESSIONS OF FREE WOMAN is a six-part series that takes a personal experimental approach to female life in the 21st century. The series narratively and visuallyinterweaves aspects of filmmaker Jennifer Fox’s own life over three years – from 42 to 45 -with the lives of diverse and courageous women from around the globe. In ways that are both humorous and profound, the film searches for new models of femaleness, examining changinggender roles and the efforts of women everywhere to comprehend and define for themselveswhat it means to be a woman in these times. What are the struggles of women in this era of new sexual and economic freedoms, shifting gender relations, a rise in religiousfundamentalism, and AIDS? What have been their journeys to self-definition and self-expression? Are they winning or losing in their own eyes? Have things really changed between men and women? And is there a new model of the female that we can now begin todefine? Never before in our collective human history have so many women had such freedom toconstruct a life of their own creation. Yet old structures and realities still haunt us; manywomen are looking for new role models, but finding them difficult to identify for lack of precedent and because even today women so often remain the invisible, silent class. Whilesocial constructs isolate us into subgroups, many women of all ages, classes, and culturesaround the world express surprisingly similar concerns and struggles. From South Africa to California, from Sweden to India, the film creates a cross-cultural story about commonexperiences of modern female life on issues such as love, socialization, marriage, work,childrearing, aging, violence, spirituality, death, politics. The series takes as a hypothesis that owning and controlling one’s own sexuality is the centerof a woman’s power and self. It also hypothesizes that the inverse is true: if a woman does notcontrol the emotional and sexual life of her own body, she cannot be fully empowered. With all the advances that women have made for themselves, patriarchal systems still exists acrossthe globe. Rarely is a woman fully in control of her own body or her own fate. Often and insome cultures, the subjugation is overt—female genital mutilation, the veil, lack of access to abortion, dowry, and rape as a tool of warfare. Just as often it is insidious—socialcondemnation of women who take joy in their sexuality, harassment defended as “harmless”flirtation, legislation prohibiting sexual education in schools and the consequences of the subsequent lack of knowledge, the equation of “female” or “feminine” with weak, incompetent or emotionally volatile.The reality is that the dangers and obstacles women face in their journey to womanhood transcend most boundaries. For women from European capitals to Saharan villages--regardless of socio-economic status, class, race, nationality or religion--claiming one’ssexuality and pleasure is a hard-fought, silent battle from childhood into old age. It requires confronting the internal and external mores placed on our pleasure by nearly every religious,societal and family system that exists. It also requires dealing with the constant threat andreality of physical violence, including domestic violence, sexual abuse and sexual disease. The ownership of one’s own sexuality is rarely discussed in the home, in public forums or in themedia, leaving women and girls with little information and few choices. How can girls andwomen safely find their way? The filmmaker postulates that much of what makes up the lives of modern women often goesunnamed, unacknowledged, and unspoken. There is a secret world women move in. Whereverthey go, there is a code that we speak, a membership we belong to by mere existence. Silently, effortlessly, and when no one is looking we slip into "woman-speak," the language ofthe marginalized, encoded since our birth. This film will attempt to enter into this secret worldof women's language, relationships, survival techniques and lives, in the hopes of charting a truer picture of modern female life and sharing that with women and men across the globe. Toexamine these complex threads of female life requires a new filmmaking methodology that willmake visible the hidden and mirror some of the new dynamics women are creating in their lives.FLYING takes an experimental narrative approach, employing new innovative techniques that reflect the interactions unique to women. Subjects explore a new way of expression by“passing the camera” between the so-called filmmaker and the so-called film subject duringthe filmed conversations. This methodology directly addresses the imbalance of power that so many documentarians struggle with, as famously posited by Susan Sontag in On Photography:“To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself into a certainrelation to the world that feels like knowledge -- and, therefore, like power.” By passing the camera, the traditional idea of the interview is dropped as roles are rotated at all times to mirrorthe relationship that women have with each other and our unique, circular way of figuring outour lives through sharing and dialogue. The camera becomes a tool that deepens conversation and intimacy between filmmaker and subject – rather than a tool of separation, objectificationand power. Boundaries are broken; the subject becomes both participant and creator.
This new technique is employed around the world in search of the meaning of modern femalelife. The camera is “passed” with other women (and men) while in motion on planes, trains,cars; inside their homes, in intimate environments such as bedrooms or kitchens; or in public, in places such as bars or restaurants or in the park. These conversations are married to scenes of the selected women in the spaces where they feel they "put their lives together" and make themselves whole. Spaces such as their workplace – midwife, teacher, designer, doctor,manager, waitress, musician, cleaner, writer, therapist, filmmaker; or in their hobbies, such asdance, sculpting, running, or listening to music; or in their relationships with their partners, their children, or their dogs. Often conversations take place around food – preparing food, and eatingfood – where the best talks usually take place. While it is impossible to be comprehensive in the representation of women, Fox has interviewedand built relationships with women representing a diverse range of class, race, nationality,religion, orientation, and age. Fox has invested the time necessary to build trust, and the intimacy the film captures reflects carefully nurtured relationships. She has been travelingwidely, returning multiple times to countries to be with women as their stories unfold, as a trueconfidante. For example, during the past three years, Fox has made countless trips to South Africa, where she has created lifelong friendships with women who were strangers before thestart of this production. Fox has visited diverse parts of the USA, Britain, France, Finland,Lapland, Bosnia, India, Russia, Argentina, Pakistan, Venezuela, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, South Africa, and Cambodia.Fox’s travels have taken her around the world and into the lives of women who, with no map or known destination, are testing boundaries and forging new spaces for themselves. Fox is onher own personal journey to figure out how she fits into the world as a single, working, sexual,childless woman. Along the way, she is also trying to figure out whether she wants children, confronting the possibility that she has waited too long to conceive, and grappling with whetherto adopt. Hidden behind her white, middle class American background, Fox shares many ofthe struggles of women around the world that allow her to connect with the women she meets: she has had to work hard to overcome the traditional values with which she grew up and tonavigate the social mores imposed on all women. She herself was sexually abused as a youngteenager, was almost raped later in life. Her quest will provide a narrative thread through the stories of other women she meets.All of the women have been filmed in an attempt to answer the intense narrative question: What does it mean to be free? How are we contesting the prescriptions of the status quo, consciouslyor unconsciously, out of necessity or out of desire? How are we reinventing both ourselves andthe very idea of being a woman? The series circles back and forth between the filmmaker’s story and the stories of other women. This theme of "passing back and forth" and its circularmetaphor will permeate the film and the images. The series is a combination of hand-heldroving images, intense conversations, visual food orgies, intimate group conversations, and changing landscapes as the filmmaker roams the world and meets up with various women.Together, filmmaker and participants will discuss and share the struggles and stories of modernlife in pursuit of some definition of this strange new world.
By examining the myriad paths available to women today, the obstacles that still exist, and the consequences of our choices, viewers are challenged to reexamine their own paths andchoices. This experimental and experiential drama will be a collective search to make sense ofbeing a woman in the modern world.
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