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Film has the power to change the way we think about ourselves and our culture. Documentarian and TED Fellow Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy uses it to fight violence against women, turning her camera on the tradition of honor killings in Pakistan. In a stirring talk, she shares how she took her Oscar-winning film on the road in a mobile cinema, visiting small towns and villages across Pakistan -- and shifting the dynamics between women, men and society, one screening at a time.
Film has the power to change the way we think about ourselves and our culture. Documentarian and TED Fellow Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy uses it to fight violence against women, turning her camera on the tradition of honor killings in Pakistan. In a stirring talk, she shares how she took her Oscar-winning film on the road in a mobile cinema, visiting small towns and villages across Pakistan -- and shifting the dynamics between women, men and society, one screening at a time.
Film has the power to change the way we think about ourselves and our culture. Documentarian and TED Fellow Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy uses it to fight violence against women, turning her camera on the tradition of honor killings in Pakistan. In a stirring talk, she shares how she took her Oscar-winning film on the road in a mobile cinema, visiting small towns and villages across Pakistan -- and shifting the dynamics between women, men and society, one screening at a time.
Le cinéma a le pouvoir de changer la façon dont nous pensons notre existence et notre culture. La réalisatrice de documentaires et TED Fellow Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy y a recours pour combattre les violences faites aux femmes, en pointant sa caméra sur la tradition des crimes d'honneur au Pakistan. Dans ce discours émouvant, elle nous explique comment elle a pris la route avec son film récompensé d'un Oscar, en visitant des petites villes et des villages à travers le Pakistan – et en modifiant les rapports entre les femmes, les hommes et la société, projection après projection.