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The Feminist Emergency Tour:  Analogue Revolution: How Feminist Media Changed the World at Cinecenta, Student Union Bldg, U Vic, 3800 Finnerty Road

The Feminist Emergency Tour: Analogue Revolution: How Feminist Media Changed the World

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

7-8:30pm

Cinecenta, Student Union Bldg, U Vic, 3800 Finnerty Road

Genres

Community Events
2 interested

Event Description

Following a successful festival run of her feature documentary film, Analogue Revolution: How Feminist Media Changed the World, filmmaker and TMU Professor Emeritus Marusya Bociurkiw will travel to Regina, Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria, Nanaimo, Pender Island and Calgary. Why take to the road? The film is meant to inspire a conversation in which the feminisms of the past -which effectively fought right wing politics in Canada- can inform this current moment. “The Carney government,” says Bociurkiw, “has omitted mention of women’s and trans issues in mandate letters, budgets, and speeches. Younger women need to know how feminists fought this kind of backlash before.” The tour features screenings, panel discussions, and local calls to action directed at local women’s and trans issues. Analogue Revolution is a fast-moving examination of Canadian feminist media from the late 1960s to the mid-1990s, when some 900 women’s publications and dozens of festivals and radio shows flourished in Canada -including Herland Feminist Film Festival (Calgary), masinahikan iskwêwak (Edmonton/Saskatoon), Press Gang Publishers (Vancouver), and Studio D at the National Film Board. While confronting censorship, racism, and moral panics, these collectives documented stories that mainstream media ignored. From the illegal publication of a birth control handbook in Montreal, to pro-choice demonstrations from the 1980s, the film climaxes with devastating funding cutbacks to women’s and lesbian organizations across Canada following 1989’s École Polytechnique massacre. Through interviews with feminist, BIPOC, and trans media activists, including Sylvia Hamilton, Bonnie Sherr Klein, Theo Cuthand, and others, and narration by rock icon Carole Pope, the documentary explores how analogue technologies and collective action expanded what stories activists could tell, and how they told them. At a moment when gender equity programs, reproductive healthcare access, and women’s rights face renewed backlash, the film shows how feminists fought the right - and won.

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