MU Africa Hub is hosting Alana DeJoseph, a Return Peace Corps Volunteer to speak about her service and recent film. The title of her presentation “Global Citizenship & the Peace Corps: A Towering Task”
About the film
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy gave Americans the opportunity to serve their country in a new way by forming the Peace Corps. Since then, more than 200,000 volunteers have traveled to more than 140 countries to carry out the organization's mission of international cooperation. Nearly 60 years later, Americans-young and old alike-still want to serve their country and understand their place in the world. Current volunteers work at the forefront of some of the most pressing issues facing the global community. Yet the agency has struggled to remain relevant. More than once it had to fight for its very existence, and now-between pandemics, climate change, and a rise in nationalist sentiment-the Peace Corps is again confronting a crisis of identity: What role should it play around the world and in the lives of engaged citizens? Narrated by Annette Bening, a celebrated actress, A Towering Task tells the remarkable story of the Peace Corps and takes viewers on a journey of what it means to be a global citizen.
About the filmmaker
Alana DeJoseph has worked in video and film production for nearly 40 years. She has worn many hats as producer, director, videographer, and editor, but her heart has always been in documentaries. Between 2003 and 2013, she was associate producer of the PBS documentaries The Greatest Good (about the U.S. Forest Service) and Green Fire (about conservationist Aldo Leopold). The Greatest Good appeared at 15 film festivals with screenings in 35 states, winning numerous awards, including the CINE Golden Eagle Award and finalist designation for the Annual Telly Awards. Green Fire appeared in 29 festivals from Colorado to India and New Zealand. Still airing on public television, it was awarded an EMMY, Telly Awards Bronze and a CINE Golden Eagle Award, among others.
Being a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer herself, she couldn't help but think that just such an in-depth, comprehensive documentary was needed for the Peace Corps. Alana says: "In a time when the American public either has a very antiquated notion of the Peace Corps, informed by an almost mythological awe of the 60s, or is not even aware that the agency still exists, at a time when global problems such as climate change and pandemics are highlighting the need for international cooperation, it is high time to bring this unique organization back into the public discourse, to raise the level of the discussion from quaint to crucial."
This event is made possible with the generous support of Return Peace Corps Volunteer Association of Central Missouri, The International Center, CAFNR International Programs, and African Graduate Professional Student Association.