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UPDATED: Watch video of the post-screening discussion below.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011 - 5:30pm - 7:30pm

Human Terrain - Film Screening & Discussion

WATCH VIDEO – An examination of the controversial US strategy of embedding academics with combat troops to win over the hearts and minds of the Iraqi and Afghan people.

Knapp Center for Biomedical Discovery
Lecture Hall 1103
900 E. 57th Street
Chicago IL, 60637

(enter at the corner of 57th and Drexel)

‘Human Terrain’ is an expose of the U.S. effort to enlist America’s best and the brightest in a global struggle for the hearts and minds of its enemies. After winning the short battle of ’shock and awe’ in Iraq, but losing the long war to bring democracy and peace to the Middle East, the U.S. military began a controversial program to ‘operationalize’ culture as an instrument of irregular warfare. With the ‘Revolution in Military Affairs’ that produced hi-tech, low-casualty victories in Panama, Bosnia, and Kosovo tarnished by long and costly counter-insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army and Marine Corps enlist anthropologists, political scientists, historians, and other academics in ‘Human Terrain Systems’ for the global war on terror.

Embedding with Marines as they go through ‘cultural sensitivity’ wargames in mock Iraqi towns in the Mojave Desert, gaining rare access to urban warfare training at Quantico, Virginia, and following human terrain trainees at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, filmmakers James Der Derian, David Udris and Michael Udris track this major shift in U.S. military policy as it ripples through American universities and civil society. Simultaneously a road-trip into the heart of the war machine and a critical investigation of academic collaboration with the military, ‘Human Terrain’ traces a new ‘revolution in military affairs’ after U.S. policies based on virtual technologies and virtuous ideologies fail to create peace, and foot soldiers are left to clean up the mess.

A panel discussion with faculty from the University of Chicago Department of Anthropology followed the screening (see video below).