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Taking over trade unionism. Depatriarchalising processes of collective struggle.
General and specialized public: art and contemporary thought, experimental video, culture and technology, labor and trade unionism, transfeminism and other activism, <3 dykes <3,...
Activity open to everyone and free of charge with a limited capacity of 55 people
Screening of Carne de mi carne: entraña by María Alcaide, with an intervention by Lucía Morales.
Carne de mi carne: entraña by María Alcaide, is a familiar video narrative made up of theory and personal experiences that attempts to bring down to earth the theory of the French anthropologist Priscille Touraille: how since prehistoric times men have kept the best pieces of meat for themselves, the diet could be the cause of the difference in height and size between the two sexes and one of the first traces of the configuration of patriarchy. This premise would imply that patriarchal social constructions are based on a supposed biological superiority that has been inherited from the dawn of civilisation to the present day. The artist's brother, heir to the family business - a butcher's shop - appears in the video as a masculine and patriarchal figure, but also as a young man who tries to confront with few tools the problems of a rural environment that tends towards digitalisation. Feminism, the rural world and inequality of opportunities are the main themes of this piece, halfway between a documentary and a family story.
The screening of Carne de mi carne: entraña will be accompanied by the presence of Lucía Morales, who will use the video to tackle themes such as the chiaroscuro of the trade union community, extractivism, exploitation, the sexual division of labour, the migratory exodus and social class gaps. Lucía Morales (Ibiza, 1985) is a political scientist, communicator and trade union, feminist, LGTBIQ and anti-racist activist. She has worked in various written and audiovisual media in which she has developed a professional discipline linked to her political praxis. She currently lives and works in Berlin, where she is part of a trade union organisation and a member of a Betriebsrat (works council), focusing on protecting the rights of various othernesses in the working environment framed by class society and the north-south divide.
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