Articles tagged with: modern languages literatures and cultures

  • Inspiring cultural reflection at heart of Black History Month community events

    Image caption: An upcoming film screening and Brock University art exhibition will bring community together in honour of Black History Month/African Heritage Month. FANON, a 2024 film about Black French Caribbean psychiatrist and freedom fighter Frantz Fanon, will be screened at FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre on Friday, Feb. 13 followed by a masterclass with the film’s director Jean-Claude Barny.

    Tuesday, February 10, 2026 | by 

    For Jean Ntakirutimana, cultural moments that connect scholarship to community are more important than ever.

    As Brock University honours Black History Month/African Heritage Month (BHM/AHM), the Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures (MLLC) is reflecting on the deep impact of culturally immersed learning.

    “Gathering in community to learn and collectively experience culture, past and present, brings depth to our academic work and offers a critical hands-on opportunity for students — indeed everyone — to expand their world views,” he said.

    The Brock and wider communities will have the opportunity to do just that at a BHM/AHM screening of the film FANON at the Film House, FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre on Friday, Feb. 13. The screening will be followed by a masterclass led by the film’s director, Jean-Claude Barny, addressing the history and impact of colonial violence.

    The biopic, which premiered in Canada at last year’s Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), follows the experiences of Frantz Fanon, a Black French Caribbean psychiatrist and freedom fighter who worked in Algeria at the beginning of the country’s fight for independence.

    Attendees will hear first-hand from the celebrated director about the making of the movie, his career and French/Caribbean cultural background.

    Ntakirutimana said in today’s context of attacks on anti-racism initiatives and the erasure of equity, diversity, inclusion and decolonization (EDID) models, FANON offers a history that sheds light on colonial systems and how they can be dismantled.

    “Fanon used innovative methods to help treat mental illness in patients caused by colonial violence. To Fanon, patients were human during a time when many considered colonized people to be ‘animals’ or sub-human,” he said.

    For Ntakirutimana, having Brock students, staff and faculty gather with community members to experience the film together and engage in critical discussion is significant.

    “It is a sign of our strength and collective desire to grow together, strengthening a vital bridge between academia and community,” he said.

    The evening is presented in partnership with Brock University’s Social Justice Research Institute, the Human Rights and Equity Office and community partner SOFIFRAN (Solidarité des femmes et familles interconnectées francophones du Niagara).

    David Vivian, Associate Professor and Scenographer, Department of Dramatic Arts, echoes Ntakirutimana that collaboration between many on-campus partners and community organizations speaks to the power of working together.

    “This opportunity brings us contemporary scholarship, critical thinking and cultural production that works against the maintenance of supremacist models and systems of suppression and control. It will be meaningful for many in our community and of special interest to our students interested in film, pop culture, psychology, psychiatry, political philosophy, post-colonial studies, social justice and the arts,” Vivian said.

    Building on the partnership with SOFIFRAN, an exhibition at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts (MIWSFPA) will open the same day as the screening celebrating BHM/AHM.

    Presented by Centre for Studies in Arts and Culture (STAC), Voix du Milieu/Voices In-between: La Francophonie Plurielle du Niagara will run from Friday, Feb. 13 to Saturday, Feb. 28.

    The exhibition, curated by Vivian and local artist, author and SOFIFRAN member Nafée Nelly Faïgou, will feature small sculptures, images and material culture from West Africa and the African Great Lakes regions, drawing from the collections of Faïgou and Fété Ngira-Batwaré Kimpiobi to celebrate BHM/AHM.

    “It is a privilege to host this very special exhibition at MIWSFPA and share extraordinary masks, richly decorated headpieces, musical instruments, textiles, pottery and more displayed throughout the first two floors of the school,” Vivian said.

    Ntakirutimana and Vivian agree that immersive social justice learning is transformative during months of significance — and all year round.

    “Whether through the magic of cinema, experiencing art or sparking thoughtful discussion, we are growing in our understanding of social justice by engaging with living culture,” Ntakirutimana said.

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  • Fentanyl drug crisis focus of free public film screening, naloxone training

    A free public screening of Love in the Time of Fentanyl will take place this Saturday, March 25 at Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts.  

    The event is expected to run from 6 to 9 p.m. in room MWS 156, beginning with naloxone and harm reduction training from 6:30 to 7 p.m., followed by the film screening at 7 p.m. and a question-and-answer session at 8:30 p.m. 

    Directed, edited and co-produced by Colin Askey, Love in the Time of Fentanyl follows a group of misfits, artists and drug users who operate a renegade safe injection site in Vancouver’s downtown eastside fighting to save lives and keep hope alive in a neighborhood ravaged by the overdose crisis. 

    Ronnie Grigg, founder of the non-profit Zero Block Society and one of the film’s key participants, will be traveling from Vancouver to present at the screening and participate in the panel discussion question-and-answer period alongside representatives from Positive Living Niagara’s StreetWorks harm reduction program. 

    The event is presented by Brock University’s Centre for Studies in Arts and Culture; Department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures; Department of Sociology; and Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, in collaboration with Positive Living Niagara and Rad Snax. 

    Love in the Time of Fentanyl had its world premiere at the 21st DOXA Documentary Film Festival, where it was featured as the Justice Forum Special Presentation and took home the Colin Low Award for Best Canadian Director. 

    WhatFree screening of Love in the Time of Fentanyl 

    When: Saturday, March 25 from 6 to 9 p.m. 

    • Doors open at 6 p.m. 
    • Naloxone and harm reduction training from 6:30 to 7 p.m. 
    • Film screening from 7 to 8:30 p.m. 
    • Panel discussion question-and-answer period and refreshments from 8:30 to 9 p.m. 

    Where: Room MWS 156 in Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, 15 Artists’ Common, St. Catharines. MWS 156 is located adjacent to the main lobby on the lower level of the School. It is accessible, with accessible washrooms nearby.  

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  • Community voices expressed through Brock art exhibitions

    Curt Richard, a student in VISA 3M90, surveys the exhibition that he and 52 other students have completed over the course of the semester. Manifestos in a Room is a collaboration between students in French, Visual Arts, and Studies in Art and Culture. It will be on display at Rodman Hall Art Centre until Dec. 30.


    (From The Brock News, Friday, Dec. 7, 2018 | By: Alison Innes)

    Two Brock art exhibitions now on display are working to celebrate and amplify community voices.

    Manifestos in a Room and Sauti za Afrika/African Voices/Voix Africaines were each created to engage with Northern Oracle, an exhibition by Heather Hart currently being featured at Rodman Hall Art Centre.

    Through the exhibition, which includes an indoor rooftop installation, Hart asks visitors what they want to say to the world and advises them to shout it from the rooftop.

    Reflecting on Northern Oracle, 53 students in Visual Arts, Studies in Arts and Culture, and French came together to create their own statements, whether poetic, absurd or political. The expressions — in both English and French — were used to create Manifestos in a Room, on display in Rodman Hall’s Studio Gallery.

    Students worked throughout the fall semester to bring the exhibition, curated by Associate Professor Catherine Parayre and instructor Donna Akrey, to life.

    Jean Ntakirutimana, Chair of the Department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures, demonstrates the talking drum used to send messages over long distances in Cameroon. With careful training, a person could use the different tones produced by the drum to send messages. The drum is just one of the items on display in Sauti za Afrika/ African Voices/ Voix Africaines, an exhibition celebrating voices of Niagara’s African diaspora community.

    “It really helps to collaborate in one’s art practice,” said Akrey, whose art students were involved in the project.

    “We also did an assembly line production to create some of the work, which was fun and rewarding. I was impressed with how the 3M90 students embraced this project and made sense of it for the viewing public.”

    For the participating French students, the exhibition was a “great opportunity to practice writing constraints for fun,” said Parayre. “Students produced facetious manifestos, writing eloquently on a light-hearted topic. It allowed all of us to put our creative forces together and share a common space.”

    The exhibition includes a visual component as well as a three-minute audio track created by the students.

    Over at Brock’s main campus, the Department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures (MLLC) is hosting Sauti za Afrika/African Voices/Voix Africaines, an exhibition meant to amplify the voices of the African diaspora in Niagara. Featuring 12 different languages, the exhibition combines modern writing with ancient traditions of communication.

    The display features instruments and figurines used for communication, such as a conch shell, similar to the one used to call for revolution in Haiti, and miniature replicas of Burundi drums used by royalty to communicate with their people.

    Also included is an intricately carved cow horn used to call people to come and hear the chief speak in certain regions of Africa, said Department Chair and Associate Professor Jean Ntakirutimana.

    Ntakirutimana worked with members of Niagara’s African diaspora and Sofifran (Solidarité des femmes et familles immigrantes francophones du Niagara) to collect people’s hopes, dreams and concerns to include in the display. Members have also loaned their personal objects for the exhibition.

    The display is a precursor to an event by the same name coming up in February. Co-hosted by Sofifran, MLLC and Studies in Arts and Culture, the event will be held at Rodman Hall and will also engage with Northern Oracle.

    Sauti za Afrika/African Voices/Voix Africaines is a part of the Museum in the Hallway project, curated by Parayre. Located in the Department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures (Mackenzie Chown A-block), the project features rotating monthly displays.

    Both African Voices and Manifestos in A Room will be on display until the end of December. Northern Oracle will be at Rodman Hall until March 3.

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