Past Event
TIME IS NOT A LINE
A public conversation around the anxiety of knowing, forgetting, history and living
TIME IS NOT A LINE
A public conversation around the anxiety of knowing, forgetting, history and living
Sunday March 10, 2013, 3:00pm - 5:00pm
Lang Cafe, 65 West 11th Street, ground floor
Featuring Silas Howard and Julian de Mayo
Inspired by the current cultural production around HIV/AIDS and the early response, this public conversation provided a forum for those engaged in counter culture and queer world making. The afternoon event was a chance to collectively reckon with historical legacies and the present moment in pursuit of progressive futures. Issues around being overwhelmed, "feeling backward', identifying with the dead, archive activism, trans politics, and "ongoing AIDS" were explored. Refreshments will be served. Hosted by Pato Hebert and Ted Kerr.
Part of
Revisiting the AIDS Crisis and the Ongoing Pandemic
Public Health Challenges in the 21st Century
Other events include:
Surviving, Uniting, Anger and the Plague
A conversation with David France and Jim Hubbard
Saturday March 9, 2013, 6:00pm
Kellen Auditorium. 66 Fifth Avenue at 13th Street, ground floor
This conversation brings together directors David France and Jim Hubbard
to discuss their documentaries, both which explore AIDS activism during
the earliest days of the ongoing pandemic in New York City. Moderated
by Tony Whitfield. To attend, RVSP here
Preceded by the following screenings in the Kellen Auditorium:
11:00am—The Other City (2010, dir. Susan Koch)
1:30pm—How To Survive a Plague (2012, dir. David
France)
4:00pm—United in Anger: A History of ACT UP
(2012, dir. Jim Hubbard)
Exposing the Impacts of Labor and Co-Infection: AIDS, Treatment and Research
Monday March 11, 2013 @ 6:00pm – 9:00pm
Bark Room, 2 West 13th Street, ground floor
On the evening of March
11, Jonathan Smith presented selections of his documentary work,
which places its focus on the impact of labor conditions on Tuberculosis
and HIV co-infection in the gold mines of South Africa and Swaziland.
Afterwards, Colleen Daniels, TB/HIV Project Director with the Treatment
Action Group NY, discussed the current state of epidemiological
research on HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis and discuss how data on
surveillance can inform health policy, advocacy and action. This event is free and open to the public. Seating is first-come, first-served. A reception will follow.