
1998
In 1810, 20 year old Sara Baartman got on a boat from Cape Town to London, unaware that she would never see her home again, or that she would become the icon of racial inferiority and black female sexuality for the next 100 years. Four years later, she became the object of scientific research that formed the bedrock of European ideas about BFS. She died the next year, but even after her death, Sara remained an object of imperialist scientific investigation. In the name of Science, her sexual organs and brain were preserved and displayed in the Musee de l'Homme in Paris until as recently as 1985. Using historical drawings, cartoons, legal documents, and interviews with noted cultural historians and anthropologists, this documentary deconstructs the social, political, scientific, and philosophical assumptions that transformed one young woman into a representation of savage sexuality and racial inferiority.

Zola Maseko

Adrian Brown

Hlengiwe Farasani

nîpawistamâsowin : We Will Stand Up

Ribbon of Sand

The Patagonian Bones

Les secrets de Fort Boyard

Fluch des Mittelmeers - Piraterie, Menschenraub und Sklaverei

Wattstax

Night Flight with Frank Zappa, Porn Wars

Master Craftsmen of Cantabria

Elton John’s Guide to Glastonbury

Sex, Love, Misery: New New York

A Tear in the Sky

The second Punic war - Oversimplified (part 3)

Ancient Armageddon

It Ain't As Easy As It Looks... (...a.k.a. the Making of 'The Cat's Meow')

Dave Chappelle's Block Party

Ritratti: Andrea Zanzotto

The King Without a Crown

White Mountains

Smile

July '64