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Accepted Film:

[has image] This Week Doesn't Really Exist  
This Week Doesn't Really Exist
Piotr Goldstein (German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM), Berlin) Olga Łojewska (German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM)) Maksymilian Awuah (Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung)
Germany | 2024 | 4' | Polish with English subtitles

Film short abstract:

Cross-border workers from Poland employed in warehouses in Brandenburg, Germany, and the gigafactory producing electric cars near the border, spend 3-5 hours a day commuting. In this film, they talk about their daily commute and its impact on their lives.

Film long abstract:

The film explores the experiences of cross-border workers who commute daily between the regions of Lubuskie in Poland and Brandenburg in Germany. In their narratives, the road emerges as a structuring principle of mobile lives within the “inner peripheries”: both the spatial and temporal logic of everyday life and the affective emphasis within the narratives are centred on travel. Given this focus and the dispersed nature of our field, we adopted a multi-sited and mobile approach, following workers’ routes between places of residence and work. This fieldwork strategy, documented in the film, responded to the limited time of our research participants and allowed us to understand their experiences of everyday mobility better. While the film’s soundtrack aims to amplify marginalised voices, articulating the spatiotemporal dimensions of cross-border labour, the visuals aim to convey the experience of being on the road, creating a point of convergence between researchers and participants.

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Title (original): This Week Doesn't Really Exist
Duration (minutes): 4
Country(ies) of filming: Poland, Germany
Country of production: Germany
Language(s): Polish with English subtitles
Year of Production: 2024
Director(s): Piotr Goldstein, Olga Łojewska, Maksymilian Awuah
Director(s)' short bio-filmography: Piotr Goldstein, PhD (Manchester), is a social and visual anthropologist working in Berlin at the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM) and the Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS). He has published on everyday activism, civil society, migrants’ social engagement, visual methods, narratives and practices of diversity, and language and identity. He is the author of internationally awarded ethnographic documentaries “Active (citizen)” (2019, together with Jan Lorenz) and “Spółdzielnia/Cooperative” (2021). Olga Łojewska is a Visiting Fellow at DeZIM, Berlin. She is currently completing her MA in Cultural Studies within the Inter-faculty Individual Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences program at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. Her thesis, Urban Voids: Re-articulations of Place in the Context of Contemporary Spatial Transformations, examines how urban wastelands and post-industrial spaces can be reinterpreted and reshaped through the creative use of their existing resources. Prior to this, Olga completed a Bachelor’s degree in Politics and Philosophy at the London School of Economics. Her research interests include urban ecology, infrastructure, memory in urban spaces, and the transformation of post-industrial and post-socialist landscapes. She uses multimodal, bottom-up research methods, engaging with local communities and the material qualities of space, both in academic research and as part of her work with local NGOs. Maksymilian Awuah is a political science student assistant from the Freie Universität Berlin who explores decolonial and intersectional themes through qualitative and visual research. His Polish-Ghanaian heritage enriches his perspectives. Passionately addressing classism, racism, and other injustices, he has worked at the VISION Project at the German Center for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM) since January 2023. Maksymilian blends his rich personal experiences with academic interests, focusing on the narratives and challenges of marginalised communities.
Producer/Production company: VISION Project
Previous screenings: 2024
Website or link for other info: http://dx.doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.31071.27041
film programme F01
Navigating Critical Junctions