DAUGHTERS OF ANATOLIA

A film by Halé Sofia Schatz
2015, 56 minutes
No. 003
DOCUMENTARY


DAUGHTERS OF ANATOLIA

$375.00
Description
A stunningly beautiful and captivating documentary, Daughters of Anatolia follows a family of nomadic goat herders as they and their animals travel an ancient seasonal migration route - a centuries-old tradition and form of livelihood that is coming under increasing pressure from the outside world.

For a thousand years, the Gök family have been following the same migration route, from the temperate winters along the Mediterranean Sea to the cool summers in the Taurus Mountains, and back again. It is a route their ancestors pursued in order to provide forage for the animals through the year, and it is still of vital importance.

The family relies entirely on their 350 goats for their sustenance and livelihood: They make, eat and sell cheese and yogurt from the milk. They shear, spin, weave, and sell goat wool. They butcher the animals for their own meat consumption. In recent years, these traditional nomadic routes have been impacted by land and water use restrictions that increasingly have made it difficult for them to follow their way of life.

Since 2011, Producer/Director Halé Sofia Schatz has lived and traveled with this family. Her images, capturing both the hardships of such a life as well as the intimate moments universal to any family unit, are breathtaking. Schatz has taken a portrait of a single family and expanded it, offering a window not only on their world, but ours as well, both in the midst of upheaval.

Festivals
Official Selection, Society for Visual Anthropology Conference
Official Selection, Trento Film Festival, Ethnographic Section
Official Selection, Nantes/Ethnographic Film and Media Program of the Middle East and Central Eurasia (EASA)
Official Selection, Istanbul International Independent Film Festival
Official Selection, Göttingen International Ethnographic Film Festival

Reviews
Daughters of Anatolia successfully captures the sensory experiences of nomadic life, and shines when documenting the work of women in herding families. As such, this film would make a valuable contribution to courses in history, anthropology, sociology, and cultural studies, among others. It offers a gentle meditation on the soon-to-be-lost nomadic life – what defines its beauty and connection to nature, as well as its unavoidable challenges.” - Al Jadid