Jane Elliott - If you are looking for a subtle approach to the subjects of diversity, racism, and discrimination...Jane Elliott is not subtle. |  | |
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| | | $295.00 | Over the years, A CLASS DIVIDED has become a classic -- a powerful exploration into the nature of prejudice which has been used in classrooms, prisons, corporations and many other governmental and educational settings Video Details... |
| | | | $295.00 | THE ANGRY EYE: Hailed as "a fascinating revisit" to the famous 1968 Blue-Eyes/Brown-Eyes Exercise in discrimination by Jane Elliott. Video Details... |
| | | | $295.00 | This best-selling program, produced by ABC News, was the first video to document Jane Elliott's courageous undertaking to help her third grade class understand the meaning of prejudice. Video Details... |
| | | | $295.00 | One DVD with three versions of Jane Elliott's Blue Eyed. Thousands of copies are in use in colleges, government agencies and corporations across the country. Video Details... |
| | | | $295.00 | "Even nice Canadians are racist" Whether or not you agree, that`s Elliott`s starting point as she welcomes and bullies 22 Canadians who have volunteered to participate in her internationally renowned workshop. Video Details... |
| | | | $195.00 | Jane Elliott's latest - and perhaps most moving - film documenting her universal Blue-Eyes/Brown-Eyes Exercise in discrimination. Video Details... |
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Jane Elliott's Angry Eye Hailed as "a fascinating revisit" to the famous 1968 Blue-Eyes/Brown-Eyes Exercise in discrimination by Jane Elliott, this film documents the effects of racial prejudice with startling force and emotional intensity. 
Taking pigmentation - in this case, eye color - as an arbitrary dividing line, Jane Elliott builds a microcosm of contemporary American society, compelling her more privileged blue-eyed participants to live in another world for the longest two and a half hours of their lives.
THE ANGRY EYE skillfully interweaves the young adults in the exercise with post-session interviews that show the participants struggling to come to terms with their recent experiences. Through the intense and often painful emotions that the exercise provokes shines a hope that, someday, we will overcome the capricious lines that divide us - if only we can learn to accept and appreciate our differences. |