Ethnographic Film Series - Brink of Survival

Ethnographic Film Series - Brink of Survival
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This is a past event

Ethnographic Film Series

Watch trailer here: https://vimeo.com/48403782

Brink of Survival is a feature-length documentary that examines the responses of a tiny African community to the global epidemics of poverty and AIDS.

The film takes us inside a mission hospital in rural Malawi. In the midst of the health crisis ravaging sub-Saharan Africa, the staff of Embangweni Hospital in the impoverished Northern region of the country serves 120,000 people, all nearly free of charge, with just one doctor. Martha Sommers and her Malawian team face an array of challenges-- outdated and broken equipment, expired medication, donors with agendas, regular power outages that have them performing surgery in the dark. Perhaps the most devastating of all, the chronic “brain drain” of trained medical practitioners from the countryside to the cities and abroad leaves the hospital acutely understaffed. But this cadre of devoted professionals, equipped with equal faith in science and religion and a strong sense of community, works around the clock to bring healthy babies into the world, cure tuberculosis and malaria, wage war against AIDS and bury the dead. 

Brink of Survival presents a complex, multivocal picture of healing for contemporary times: It is music, theater, and dance; perseverance, celebration, and commiseration; donor aid from around the world and human resources from the community. As the hospital team negotiates the tension between modern medicine and traditional healing, the church and traditional religion, and colonialism and traditional culture, it finds that the problem of caring for people under perpetually precarious conditions has no simple cure.

Hosted by
Elphinstone Institute
Venue
MacRobert Building Room 051
Contact

Free admission
No booking required