Back to All Events

HOLLOW TREE Screening and Q&A with Director, Producer, and Protagonists

Join us for the Boston Premiere of Hollow Tree, hosted by History Design Studio in partnership with the Harvard Graduate School of Education. The screening will be followed by a conversation with Director Kira Akerman, Producer Monique Walton, and the 3 protagonists.

Moderated by Walter Johnson with an Introduction by Vincent Brown.

This event is the first in the Swamp Capitalism Event Series convened by History Design Studio Fellow Robin McDowell.

Free and open to the public. Advance tickets highly recommended. See the full event listing HERE

About the Film

Hollow Tree follows three teenagers coming of age in their sinking homeland of Louisiana. For the first time, they notice the Mississippi River’s engineering, stumps of cypress trees, and billowing smokestacks. Their different perspectives — as Indigenous, white, and Angolan young women — shape their story of the climate crisis.

The 73-minute award-winning documentary, directed by Kira Akerman and produced by Monique Walton and Chachi Hauser, invites three young women, who did not previously know each other, to learn with the director, filmmaking team, and their respective communities. Mekenzie Fanguy (Houma, Louisiana) was born on coastal bayous and is a member of the United Houma Nation; Annabelle Pavy (Lafayette, Louisiana) is from a mostly white community, where climate change is largely viewed as a myth; and Tanielma DaCosta (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) immigrated from Angola, Africa when she was 6. They travel to different sites along the Mississippi River, where they engage in dialogue with engineers, activists, and Indigenous leaders. As these young women notice their surroundings, they begin to imagine Louisiana's past — its history of slavery, Indigenous dispossession, and colonization — and, by extension, Louisiana's future. The one that they will experience and help to shape.

https://hollowtreefilm.com/


The Swamp Capitalism Event Series brings together artists, teachers, activists, filmmakers, and academics from New Orleans, Cambridge, and beyond.

Swamp Capitalism: The Roots of Environmental Racism, an interdisciplinary project of History Design Studio Fellow Dr. Robin McDowell, traces racial, ecological, and economic encounters between African descended peoples, petroleum, sugar, and salt in Louisiana swamps on a geologic time scale. The programming brings this research to life through artmaking, documentary film, and intergenerational dialogues.

Previous
Previous
March 14

Critical Global Studies Institute Colloquium

Next
Next
April 5

Earth Pigments Workshop