Eileen G'Sell publishes "The Hidden Labor of Civil Rights: An Interview with Dawn Porter" in Film Quarterly

College Writing Senior Lecturer Eileen G'Sell's interview with filmmaker Dawn Porter, The Hidden Labor of Civil Rights: An Interview with Dawn Porter, was published in Film Quarterly (Winter 2020, Volume 74, Issue 2).


From her 2013 directorial debut Gideon’s Army, on the trials of public defenders, to John Lewis: Good Trouble, her 2020 tribute to the late Congressman, Dawn Porter’s documentaries reveal the scope and scale of American injustice while never capitulating to pessimism. Whether focusing attention on the carceral system, abortion access, or voter suppression, her films suggest that the rights guaranteed by the Constitution are upheld through the collective efforts of an earnest, anonymous many. In this interview, Porter reflects on the appeal of contradictory characters, her objective to “disappear” as a documentarian, and the challenges of completing a film during an international pandemic.


Washington University faculty, staff, and students can access the journal off campus through the University Libraries proxy, here: The Hidden Labor of Civil Rights: An Interview with Dawn Porter

 

Thumbnail image: Bckirchoff, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons