Loading Events

“Cargo in Question: Two Films about Labor, Shipping, and Globalization in the 21st Century”

September 16, 2023 @ 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm

Home » Events » “Cargo in Question: Two Films about Labor, Shipping, and Globalization in the 21st Century”
Still Photo 1 - All That Perishes

The Santa Barbara Maritime Museum (SBMM) presents “Cargo in Question: Two Films about Labor, Shipping, and Globalization in the 21st Century” taking place on Saturday, September 16, 2023, at 1:00 p.m. As part of this special event, Mae Miller-Likhethe, PhD and Charmaine Chua, PhD, both assistant professors of Global Studies at UCSB, will screen two films—Cargo (2001, 29 minutes) and All that Perishes at the Edge of Land (2019, 31 minutes)—followed by a Q&A session and discussion (a full 90 minutes). The films, which blur the lines between fiction and reality, offer important insights into the daily lives, working conditions, and dreams of the seamen and ship-breakers across global supply chains. The cost is free for all SBMM members; free for students with student ID; and the price of admission for the general public. Space is limited, registration is required.

 

About the Films

Cargo (Dir. Laura Waddington, 2001, 29 minutes) is the story of a journey on a container ship with a group of Rumanian and Filipino sailors, who were delivering cargo to the Middle East.
Most of the sailors weren’t allowed to leave the boat and they spent their days waiting, singing
karaoke and telling stories in a small TV room. In Syria, the ports were military zones. The filmmaker hid at a porthole and secretly filmed the life below – a man stealing wood and a soldier fishing off the edge of an abandoned submarine – and later created a narrative that falls between reality and fiction in an effort to show the limbo these men were living in.

All that Perishes at the Edge of Land (Dir. Hira Nabi, 2019, 31 minutes) shows the Ocean Master, a decommissioned container vessel, and enters into a dialogue with several workers at the Gadani yards. The conversation moves between dreams, desires, places that can be called home, and the violence embedded in the act of dismantling a ship at Gadani. As the workers recall the homes and families they left behind, the long work days mesh indistinguishably into one another, and they are forced to confront the realities of their work in which they are faced with death every day. How may they survive and look toward the future?

This event is generously sponsored by Marie L. Morrisroe.

 

About the Speakers

Mae Miller-Likhethe, PhD, assistant professor at UC Santa Barbara and curatorial fellow at IMPAKT Centre for Media Culture in Utrecht (Netherlands), is an interdisciplinary scholar, storyteller, educator, and curator who studies social movements, global shipping, and cultural production. As Miller-Likhethe describes her work, “I research the intellectual histories and political cultures of the Black diaspora and Third World Left throughout the twentieth century. I approach this work with a desire to understand the past and to draw lessons for the present.”

Miller-Likhethe holds a bachelor’s degree in geography from Ohio State University; studied at UCLA, International Institute for Research and Education in Amsterdam, and the University of Bologna in Italy; and completed her doctorate in earth and environmental sciences at City University of New York. She has also been a visiting lecturer at Vassar College; a postgraduate researcher at the University of Glasgow, Scotland; and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley before coming to Santa Barbara.

Charmaine Chua, PhD is an organizer, writer, and researcher who focuses on political economy, postcolonial development, and technological change, with a specific interest in the history and present of maritime and hinterland logistical systems. Chua’s writing has appeared in popular outlets such as Boston Review, The Nation, and The New York Times. Chua is currently completing a book manuscript, The Logistics Counterrevolution: Fast Circulation, Slow Violence, and the Transpacific Empire of Capital. She  holds a bachelor’s degree in English and political science from Vassar College and a doctorate in political science from the University of Minnesota.  Before accepting their current position at UC Santa Barbara, Chua taught at Macalester College in Minnesota and Oberlin College in Ohio.

Upcoming Events

Venue

Santa Barbara Maritime Museum
113 Harbor Way
Santa Barbara, CA 93109 United States
+ Google Map
Phone
805 962 8404
View Venue Website

Details

Date:
September 16, 2023
Time:
1:00 pm - 2:30 pm
Event Category: