Keynote: Jennifer Abbott
Time
Event Details
Borrowed Time Co-convenor Mat Osmond in conversation with Jennifer Abbott, Director of The Magnitude of All Things. We have made available to all delegates a
Event Details
Borrowed Time Co-convenor Mat Osmond in conversation with Jennifer Abbott, Director of The Magnitude of All Things.
We have made available to all delegates a private screening of Jennifer Abbott’s acclaimed film The Magnitude of All Things. Here Ms Abbott is in conversation with Mat Osmond. You are invited to view the film at any time (but preferably before this session) from the beginning of the symposium until the end of Day 2 (Monday November 1). After that the film will no longer be available for viewing but can be seen at numerous festivals and special venues around the world.
“It was grief. I knew it well. And this time it was for the changing world around me.”
When Jennifer Abbott lost her sister to cancer, her sorrow opened her up to the profound gravity of climate breakdown. Abbott’s new documentary The Magnitude of All Things draws intimate parallels between the experiences of grief—both personal and planetary. Stories from the frontlines of climate change merge with recollections from the filmmaker’s childhood on Ontario’s Georgian Bay. What do these stories have in common? The answer, surprisingly, is everything.
This cinematic journey by the Sundance award-winning director (The Corporation) takes us around the world to witness a planet in crisis: from Australia’s catastrophic fires and dying Great Barrier Reef, to the island nation of Kiribati, drowned by rising sea levels. In Nunatsiavut, melting ice permanently alters the landscape, while in the Amazon rainforest, Indigenous people fight a desperate battle against oil and mining extraction.
For the people featured, climate change is not happening in the distant future; it is kicking down the front door, flooding homes, poisoning water and destroying communities. The connection between humanity and the environment is stated plainly by Australia’s Wonnarua Traditional Custodians: “If this land hurts, we hurt.”
Like ash from a distant fire, grief on this scale touches everything. But coming to terms with the brutal reality of climate breakdown requires more than empty words and gestures. When hope is lost, the real work begins. Members of Extinction Rebellion protest in the streets, risking arrest. Greta Thunberg’s school strike grows from a solitary vigil to a mass movement. The Sápara, Wonnarua and Nunatsiavut land defenders hold the line in a life and death struggle. Facing her own mortality, Jennifer’s sister offers another kind of answer: “Just a simple, quiet openness to all that is.” Battles waged, lamentations of loss, and raw testimony coalesce into an extraordinary tapestry, woven together with raw emotion and staggering beauty that transform darkness into light, grief into action.
The URL for viewing the film will be released to all delegates at 15.00GMT on Sunday, October 31.
Organizer
Speakers for this event
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Jennifer Abbott
Flying Eye Productions
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Mat Osmond
Falmouth University
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