Longfellow, Brenda2015-12-162015-12-162015-08-182015-12-16http://hdl.handle.net/10315/30705"Sing For Me" is a contemplation of the notion of belonging, connecting with heritage in the form of an inherited nostalgia, while investigating the viewpoint of fractured diasporic identities and ethnic solidarity, and meditating on a fading ancient practice that sends its roots back to the depth of Babylonian history. A personal reflexive lens that departs from loss and follows a river to meet Baghdad, the film travels through shared family memory, a collage of stories and old footage that provide a glimpse of Iraq’s modern history and its defeated dreams of a modern and just society, broken by decades of severe dictatorship that have led to a culture of violence, ongoing genocides and religious extremism. The journey is guided by a familiar voice from the past, found on an old audiotape in an abandoned box, to a new exposition of ‘home’.enAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.Film studiesFine artsSing for MeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2015-12-16IraqfamilyMandaeanismHistoryDiasporaIdentityMinoritiesExperimentalDocumentary