Screening + Q&A: Made in Ethiopia

Screening + Q&A: Made in Ethiopia

Three women - a farmer, a worker, and a manager - tell their stories amid the Chinese-led industrialisation of Ethiopia.

By Frontline Club

Date and time

Wednesday, July 23 · 7 - 9pm GMT+1

Location

Frontline Club

13 Norfolk Place London W2 1QJ United Kingdom

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

When a massive Chinese industrial park lands in rural Ethiopia, a dusty farming town finds itself at the new frontier of globalization. The sprawling factory complex’s formidable Chinese director Motto now needs every bit of mettle and charm she can muster to push through a high-stakes expansion that promises 30,000 new jobs. Ethiopian farmer Workinesh and factory worker Beti have staked their futures on the prosperity the park promises. But as initial hope meets painful realities, they find themselves, like their country, at a pivotal crossroads.

Filmed over four years with singular access, Made in Ethiopia lifts the curtain on China’s historic but misunderstood impact on Africa, and explores contemporary Ethiopia at a moment of profound crisis. The film throws audiences into two colliding worlds: an industrial juggernaut fueled by profit and progress, and a vanishing countryside where life is still measured by the cycle of the seasons. And its nuance, complexity and multi-perspective approach go beyond black and white narratives of victims and villains. As the three women’s stories unfold, Made in Ethiopia challenges us to rethink the relationship between tradition and modernity, growth and welfare, the development of a country and the well-being of its people.

Max Duncan is an award-winning filmmaker, cinematographer and journalist whose work

has appeared on platforms including the BBC, PBS, The Guardian, The New York Times

and Al Jazeera. He worked for a decade in China, first as a video journalist for Reuters

news agency in Beijing and then independently, exploring the country’s meteoric rise from

many angles. He has since reported widely across Asia (including several times in North

Korea), Africa, Europe and Latin America. Max has won a World Press Photo Award, been

supported by organizations including Pulitzer, and is an alumnus of Yaddo and Logan

Nonfiction programs. Made in Ethiopia is his feature documentary debut.

Rest of panel TBC.

Organized by

We are Frontline Club, a social enterprise started in a Paddington warehouse in 2003, originally a gathering place for conflict journalists, writers and friends, now boast international members from various related sectors, photographers, artists and captains of industry, all with an interest in current affairs. We run an annual events programme of current affairs and deliver important unreported stories of our world, in the form of talks, documentaries, books & screenings, funded by our ground floor public restaurant, membership donations & event ticket sales. Raising our own funds has enabled us to operate and champion independently journalism & freedom of speech.

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