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Free screening and discussion - King Corn

Free screening and discussion - King Corn
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  • Free screening and discussion - King Corn

    Post #1 - March 3rd, 2008, 11:48 am
    Post #1 - March 3rd, 2008, 11:48 am Post #1 - March 3rd, 2008, 11:48 am
    The Public Square at the Illinois Humanities Council presents:

    Civic Cinema: King Corn

    Saturday, March 15
    2:00 PM – 4:00 PM
    Chicago Cultural Center
    Claudia Cassidy Theater (2nd Floor)
    77 East Randolph Street
    Chicago


    Free and open to the public. Reservations are required and can be made online, by e-mail at events@prairie.org, or by calling 312.422.5580.

    Join us for a screening of the critically-acclaimed documentary King Corn, followed by a thought-provoking discussion about the availability and sustainability of food in modern culture.

    King Corn is the story of two friends who grow an acre of corn in Iowa and learn the disturbing truth about growing and consuming food in modern America.


    "Enormously entertaining! A moral, socio-economic odyssey through the American food system." – The Boston Globe


    The post-screening discussion with local food activist LaDonna Redmond and artist Claire Pentecost will ask: what exactly goes into making the food in a local grocery store? And what do you eat if there isn't a store around you? How can we combat the "food desert" phenomenon? How can the average consumer agitate for greater access to local and sustainable products in their neighborhood? Join us for an intriguing look at the truth about what we eat every day.


    ABOUT THE PANELISTS
    LaDonna Redmond is a community food security activist working on Chicago’s west side. She is the President and CEO of The Institute for Community Resource Development (ICRD), a non-profit, community based organization that assists residents of urban communities obtain access to safe, healthy food through the development of alternative food systems. Ms. Redmond and her husband Tracey are involved in developing an urban farm in partnership with the University of Illinois. She sits on numerous local and national boards, including the National Campaign for Sustainable Agriculture and Governor Rod Blagojevich’s Advisory Council on Agriculture, the Consortium to Lower Obesity in Chicago’s Children, and the Chicago Public School Task Force to Improve Healthy Eating. Ms. Redmond’s writing has appeared in Orion Magazine, New Farm and the New York Times. She received her BA from Antioch College.

    Claire Pentecost is an artist and writer, engaging a variety of media to interrogate the imaginative and institutional structures that organize divisions of knowledge. Having spent years tinkering in a conceptual laboratory for ideas about the natural and the artificial, her recent projects concentrate on industrial and bioengineered agriculture, the alternatives and the trade regimes that force one over the other. She is currently work-shopping a beta phase of VisibleFood: a wiki based website dedicated to exposing the hidden costs of the global corporate system that produces our food. Pentecost is Associate Professor in the Photography Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she teaches photography, drawing, critical theory and interdisciplinary seminars. You can learn more about her work at her website.


    MORE ABOUT KING CORN
    King Corn is a feature documentary about two friends, one acre of corn, and the subsidized crop that drives our fast-food nation. Ian Cheney and Curt Ellis, best friends from college on the east coast, move to the heartland to learn where their food comes from. With the help of friendly neighbors, genetically modified seeds, and powerful herbicides, they plant and grow a bumper crop of America’s most-productive, most-subsidized grain on one acre of Iowa soil. But when they try to follow their pile of corn into the food system, what they find raises troubling questions about how we eat-and how we farm. For more information, visit the film’s official website.


    This program is co-sponsored by The Public Square at the IHC, Independent Television Service (ITVS), the Chicago Cultural Center, Independent Lens, and WTTW Channel 11.
  • Post #2 - March 3rd, 2008, 1:41 pm
    Post #2 - March 3rd, 2008, 1:41 pm Post #2 - March 3rd, 2008, 1:41 pm
    Just called for reservations. The Wife and I are going. I've heard a lot about this film, and having read Pollan's Omnivore's Dilemma, I'm keen on knowing more about corn, which I still like a lot but now view with growing suspicion.
    "Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins
  • Post #3 - March 3rd, 2008, 2:26 pm
    Post #3 - March 3rd, 2008, 2:26 pm Post #3 - March 3rd, 2008, 2:26 pm
    Will this include a discussion of the King Corn savings stamps from the 1960s?
  • Post #4 - March 3rd, 2008, 3:36 pm
    Post #4 - March 3rd, 2008, 3:36 pm Post #4 - March 3rd, 2008, 3:36 pm
    I'll be there.
  • Post #5 - March 4th, 2008, 7:39 am
    Post #5 - March 4th, 2008, 7:39 am Post #5 - March 4th, 2008, 7:39 am
    I plan on being there.

    Jyoti
    Jyoti
    A meal, with bread and wine, shared with friends and family is among the most essential and important of all human rituals.
    Ruhlman
  • Post #6 - March 15th, 2008, 9:29 am
    Post #6 - March 15th, 2008, 9:29 am Post #6 - March 15th, 2008, 9:29 am
    I actually have an extra ticket reserved (friend couldn't make it) if anyone needs it.

    -Dan

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