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Events

Afsan's Long Day: A film by Naeem Mohaiemen

Hosted by the Department of International History

MAR.2.04, Marshall Building, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳, United Kingdom

Speaker

Dr Naeem Mohaiemen

Dr Naeem Mohaiemen

Associate Professor of Visual Arts, Columbia University

Chair

Dr Diva Gujral

Dr Diva Gujral

ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Fellow in the Department of International History

The ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Modern World Research Cluster presents Afsan’s Long Day, a film by Naeem Mohaiemen.

Naeem Mohaiemen combines films, photography, drawings, and essays to research forms of  slippage in South Asia after 1945. He is the author of  (Dhaka: Nokta / University of Liberal Arts, 2023) and  (Basel: Kunsthalle Basel, 2014); co-editor (w/ Eszter Szakacs) of  (Budapest: Tranzit / University of Budapest, 2023), co-editor (w/ Lorenzo Fusi) of  (Sienna: Sylvana, 2007), and editor of  (Dhaka: Drishtipat, 2010), Monographs on his artist projects include (Toronto: Power Plant, 2021). He is an Associate Professor of Visual Arts and Head of Photography Concentration, at the School of Arts, Columbia University, New York.

Mohaiemen’s archive-based film practice is concerned with shifting borders, unlikely networks of transnational solidarity and the failures of armed leftist movements of the 1970s, a theme that runs across The Young Man Was Series that Afsan’s Long Day forms part of. Thus, United Red Army (The Young Man Was, Part I, 2011) examines the 1977 hijacking of a Japanese commercial airplane by the Japanese Red Army, which had attached itself to the Palestinian cause and to global pan-Arabism. As the film suggests, the hijackers’ decision to land the plane in Dhaka, and the events that followed, were coloured by the Red Army’s misrecognition of Bangladesh’s political landscape at the time. Afsan’s Long Day (The Young Man Was, Part II, 2014), weaves together the account of a young historian, Afsan Chowdhury, persecuted by the Bangladeshi state in the 1970s, with events of the German Autumn and the dissolution of extreme left movements in Europe. Taken together, the films offer a potent depiction of the global 1970s as a departure from the hopeful transnational exchanges that had marked an earlier part of the twentieth century.

Those registered to attend will be sent a link to watch United Red Army and will follow with Afsan’s Long Day in person on the 17th November. Following the film screening, Naeem Mohaiemen will be in conversation with Diva Gujral, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Fellow in the Department of International History, and will take questions from the audience.

How to attend the event: 

This is a public event open to all. Though, registration is required for each event via 

Email ih.events@lse.ac.uk if you have any questions about the event.

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