02/07/2013(Thursday)- Screening:Half the Sky - Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide
A screening of the documentary series that introduces women who are living under some of the most difficult circumstances imaginable - and fighting bravely to change them. The film reflects viable and sustainable options for empowerment and offers an actionable blueprint for transformation. Annenberg Auditorium
University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA 90089
Time:7:00 - 8:30PM
Free, please click here to RSVP.
China is one of the lenses WuDunn and Kristof use to highlight issues affecting women and girls in their book, Half the Sky. Issues that Chinese women face include a lack of investment in education in poor rural areas, gender imbalance due to forced or sex-selective abortions, and discrimination in the workplace. Yet the authors also use China to illustrate the vast improvements that have been made for women over time and their consequent effects.
The knowledge that Sheryl WuDunn and Nicholas Kristof gained about the status of women and girls during their time living in China as journalists helped to solidify the urgent need to change perceptions about gender globally. The authors write:"China has traditionally been one of the more repressive and smothering places for girls, and we could see hints of this in Sheryl's own family history." When Cheryl's grandfather's first wife could not bear sons, he married another wife who could, forgetting about the family who came before Cheryl's own.
While Chinese women do still face discrimination and more traditional views about women overall, the authors acknowledge that China offers maternity benefits, Chinese men are beginning to do more household work, and Chinese women are often leading decision-making in the home. Even more importantly, the authors show that the "emancipation" of women has allowed for China's tremendous growth. In fact, according to the book, 80 percent of the workers in China's coastal factories are female. They also write about a young girl in rural China who could not afford her $13 school fee. After mobilizing donors from their news articles, the school could now offer scholarships to keep girls in school. The young girl was able to stay in school and now is an entrepreneur. By illuminating changes in China, WuDunn and Kristof are able to thread together their main argument that investing in and caring about women and girls worldwide, aside from a very credible moral case, has exponential benefits.
Click here for the official website and to view the trailer.
Sponsors
USC U.S.-China Institute
USC Price School Women for Policy, Planning, and Development(WLPPD)
USC Price School Asian Pacific Islander Caucus(APIC)
USC Women's Student Assembly
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Suggested Parking
Parking Structure D(PSD)
Enter at the Jefferson Boulevard Entrance at Royal Street(Entrance 4).
Parking Structure X(PSX)
Enter at the Figueroa Street Entrance at 35th Street(Entrance 3)
Parking on campus is $10.
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Tel:213-821-4382 | Fax:213-821-2382 | uschina@usc.edu | china.usc.edu
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