Ohio State nav bar

Screening of Darwin's Nightmare

Movie poster text reads Darwin's Nightmare Academy Award Nominee Best Documentary feature
October 17, 2013
5:00PM - 8:00PM
3094 Smith Labs

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2013-10-17 17:00:00 2013-10-17 20:00:00 Screening of Darwin's Nightmare  Screening of Darwin’s Nightmare & Round-Table DiscussionSmith Labs 3094Thursday, October 17, 5-8pmSometime in the 1960's, in the heart of Africa, a new animal was introduced into Lake Victoria as a little scientific experiment. The Nile Perch, a voracious predator, extinguished almost the entire stock of the native fish species. However, the new fish multiplied so fast, that its white fillets are today exported all around the world. Huge hulking ex-Soviet cargo planes come daily to collect the latest catch in exchange for their southbound cargo…Kalashnikovs and ammunitions for the uncounted wars in the dark center of the continent. This booming multinational industry of fish and weapons has created an ungodly globalized alliance on the shores of the world’s biggest tropical lake: an army of local fishermen, World bank agents, homeless children, African ministers, EU-commissioners, Tanzanian prostitutes, and Russian pilots.Organized and hosted by Ellie Flohn (WGSS), Sonnet Gabbard (WGSS), Josh Kurz (Comparative Studies), and Matthew O’Malley (Comparative Studies)on behalf of the Precarity and Social Contract Working Group  of the Humanities InstituteFor further information, please contact Philip Armstrong at armstrong.202@osu.edu 3094 Smith Labs Humanities Institute huminst@osu.edu America/New_York public

 Screening of Darwin’s Nightmare

& Round-Table Discussion

Smith Labs 3094

Thursday, October 17, 5-8pm

Sometime in the 1960's, in the heart of Africa, a new animal was introduced into Lake Victoria as a little scientific experiment. The Nile Perch, a voracious predator, extinguished almost the entire stock of the native fish species. However, the new fish multiplied so fast, that its white fillets are today exported all around the world. Huge hulking ex-Soviet cargo planes come daily to collect the latest catch in exchange for their southbound cargo…Kalashnikovs and ammunitions for the uncounted wars in the dark center of the continent. This booming multinational industry of fish and weapons has created an ungodly globalized alliance on the shores of the world’s biggest tropical lake: an army of local fishermen, World bank agents, homeless children, African ministers, EU-commissioners, Tanzanian prostitutes, and Russian pilots.

Organized and hosted by Ellie Flohn (WGSS), Sonnet Gabbard (WGSS), Josh Kurz (Comparative Studies), and Matthew O’Malley (Comparative Studies)

on behalf of the Precarity and Social Contract Working Group
 of the Humanities Institute

For further information, please contact Philip Armstrong at armstrong.202@osu.edu