The Kanopy digital stream service has these handpicked films for the month of July. You can access Kanopy from home using your library barcode or on any computer on campus,
We’ve lost touch with nature.This disconnect hurts our health, dulls our spirit, and threatens our future. Narrated by Liam Neeson, Love Thy Nature is a cinematic immersion into the beauty and intimacy of our relationship with the natural world.
This award-winning documentary tells the poignant, stories of female jazz and big band instrumentalists and their fascinating, history-making journeys from the late 30s to the present day. The many first-hand accounts of the challenges faced by these talented women provide a glimpse into decades of racism and sexism in America.
A visually stunning journey to the end of the world. Guided by nature photographer Anthony Powell, we experience firsthand the beauty and brutality of the most severe environment on Earth along with the hardy and devoted people who call it home year-round.
In 1970, 1,500 hippies founded a commune in rural Tennessee. Members forked over their savings, grew their own food, delivered their babies at home and built a self-sufficient society. Raised in this community, filmmakers and sisters Rena and Nadine return for the first time since leaving in 1985.
Trailblazing performance artist-theorist-activist, Kate Bornstein, takes us on a mind-bending quest through her world dismantling gender and seeking answers to the age-old question: What makes life worth living? This film captures public performances and painful personal revelations related to the pioneering gender outlaw.
How did a country that until 2010 had no organ donation system, become one of the world’s organ transplant leaders? For years, China claimed that the organs came from executed prisoners, but the numbers didn’t add up. Short wait times and a endless supply of donors, made China a popular destination for transplant surgeries.