54 minutes SDH Captioned Grades 6 - 12, College, Adults Directed by Emily Harrold Produced by Emily Harrold, Seth Gadsden DVD Purchase $295, Rent $95 US Release Date: 2021 Copyright Date: 2021 DVD ISBN: 1-948745-68-2 Subjects Activism African-American Studies American Democracy American Studies Anthropology Civil Rights Conflict Resolution History Humanities Law Political Science Race and Racism Social Justice Social Psychology Sociology Southern Studies Awards and Festivals Best Short, Big Sky Documentary Film Festival Best National Short, AmDocs Best Documentary Short, Ashland Independent Film Festival Special Jury Award, Provincetown International Film Festival Best Juried Short, San Francisco DocFest Vimeo Staff Pick AFI Fest St. Louis International Film Festival Mountainfilm Sedona Film Festival Florida Film Festival New Orleans Film Festival Rocky Mountain Women's Film Festival Dallas VideoFest Montclair Film Festival Macon Film Festival ReadingFilmFEST |
Meltdown In Dixie In Orangeburg, SC, a battle erupts between the Sons of Confederate Veterans and an ice cream shop owner forced to fly the Confederate flag in his parking lot.
[Note: Community screenings of MELTDOWN IN DIXIE can be booked at Bullfrog Communities.] Note: There are two versions of this program on the same DVD: 54-minutes and 40-minutes. In the wake of the 2015 Charleston Massacre, new creamery owner Tommy Daras, who once considered the flag an acceptable sign of a rebel, has a change of heart and commits to doing anything possible to get it down. But "Keeper of the Flag" Buzz Braxton and the Sons of Confederate Vets refuse. With Confederate symbols coming down around the country, can Tommy get the flag down in Orangeburg? This intimate, verité-driven short documentary film explores the broader role of Confederate symbolism in the 21st century and the lingering racial oppression which these symbols help maintain. Reviews "Meltdown in Dixie is an excellent and important film about an episode in our ongoing saga over Confederate symbols that lays bare the stakes of these debates for the everyday people affected by this complex issue. It is a fascinating and poignant film that raises frustrating but valuable questions over property rights, historical memory, and the slow pace of change." William Sturkey, Associate Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Author, Hattiesburg: An American City in Black and White "Monuments falling, Confederate flags coming down, and people taking to protest racial injustice are the images of a Southern Lost Cause coming undone. Too often the lives of ordinary folks disappear in the national story. This film looks behind the dramatic headlines...This is a powerful film told through the voices of blacks and whites. Meltdown in Dixie brilliantly succeeds in giving voice to the common people caught in the collision of the past and the present." Peter S. Carmichael, Professor of Civil War Studies, Director of the Civil War Institute, Gettysburg College, Author, The War for the Common Soldier: How Men Thought, Fought, and Survived in Civil War Armies "Meltdown In Dixie is a moving and timely narrative of the modern South. Sensitively weaving together interviews on race, history, and politics, filmmaker Emily Harrold demonstrates how all combine to reverberate across generations and in different ways for various people. The narrative dramatically highlights the vicious legacy of white supremacy which still raises its ugly head; but countered by a coalition of Black and white locals who use both the rule of law and community activism to combat racism and help move the American experiment towards a truer multicultural democracy." Orville Vernon Burton, Chair of History, Professor of Pan-African Studies, Sociology and Anthropology, and Computer Science, Clemson University "Meltdown in Dixie is a riveting film that uses a local conflict over the Confederate battle flag in Orangeburg, South Carolina to educate viewers about the broader issues of race, memory, and power implicated in controversies over public displays of Confederate iconography. Its use of first-person narratives to illustrate these issues renders it an excellent documentary for learning about the ways in which symbols of the past continue to convey powerful meanings in the present and future. This film has resonance for a variety of audiences, and I highly recommend it." Patricia Davis, Associate Professor of Communication Studies, Northeastern University, Author, Laying Claim: African American Cultural Memory and Southern Identity "Symbols are important. In public spaces they mark who belongs, who is welcome, and who is excluded. Meltdown in Dixie is an honest and empathetic portrayal of a controversy over the public display of the Confederate battle flag in a small South Carolina town. Through this film, students will be able to see the emotional power that historical memory exercises in the present, as well as the bravery and persistence it takes to overcome resistance to change. The film will work well for classes in which students are exploring the enduring power of the Lost Cause narrative of the Civil War in the American South." Gabriel Reich, Associate Professor of History/Social Studies Education, Virginia Commonwealth University "Meltdown in Dixie offers a sad, subtle, powerful examination of the confrontation over Confederate symbolism in one small southern town. It lets both sides speak as it reveals the racial tensions at the heart of the debate over a Confederate flag in front of a local creamery. With the flag still flying and the creamery closed at the end of the movie, the film will foster classroom discussion." Gaines Foster, Professor of History, Louisiana State University, Author, Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, the Lost Cause, and the Emergence of the New South "This is a timely film that demonstrates the tensions between those that want to fly the Confederate flag and those that find the flag offensive. As we grapple with our past, Meltdown in Dixie is an important tool that could be used in classrooms to help facilitate important discussions." Andrea Benjamin, Associate Professor of African and African American Studies, University of Oklahoma "Meltdown In Dixie focuses on Orangeburg, SC to discuss the broader issue of how the United States confronts (or fails to confront) white supremacy. The documentary highlights the pernicious qualities that contribute to white supremacy's resilience and the difficulties related to challenging the system and its related practices. Meltdown In Dixie offers educators a useful tool to spark more detailed discussions and student-driven projects." Peter Simi, Associate Professor of Sociology, Chapman University, Co-author, American Swastika: Inside the White Power Movement's Hidden Spaces of Hate "Highly Recommended...A well-executed documentary...This film would be very useful for collections that focus on current history, monuments, public memory, or any other program that would benefit from primary source interviews on issues of national scale. As a case study tied to a broader context, it is unlikely to become obsolete as a historical primary source, and this creates ongoing value for a library to purchase it. Overall, Meltdown in Dixie is an excellent exploration of an important subject." Alan Witt, SUNY Geneseo, Educational Media Reviews Online |