Working together (37 min. ; 2022) / produced & directed by Michael Rogosin. Working together (37 min. ; 2022) / produced & directed by Michael Rogosin.
Summary:
Down in the lush backwoods of Mississippi and Alabama, history is being made. Poor Black and White working people are trying to overcome the forces of racism among themselves to organize into cooperative associations to dispel the bonds of their economic captors the paper and pulpwood companies. In his unique Woodcutters of the Deep South (1973), Lionel Rogosin (On the Bowery) allows the people in the film to tell and live their own stories. We see them in their homes, with their families, and in the forests, which provide them the things that make them woodcutters trees, and freedom. Interviews with the men directly involved in the formation of the group. The Gulf Coast Pulpwood Association reveals the intricacies of this venture, an inspiring depiction of unity among workers of all races. Michael A. Rogosin's Working Together (2022) examines the consequences and questions that were implied in Woodcutters. Inherent in the original film is not only the question of Black and White folks working together but what happened to the Civil Rights movement in the '70s. By revisiting the film with Bob Zellner, who was in the original film, and other major Civil Rights workers, Lionel's son Michael helps to understand what happened and is happening in America today.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.