Item 1 of 4

108 days
16 min
Quebec, 2021

Production : Diane Poitras
French, English
French, English

Archives



Synopsis


Marketing pitches between 1940 and 1970 lead to believe that new technologies facilitating household chores were responsible for women’s emancipation in the 20th century. By reusing commercials and television archives, this retro futurist feminist essay questions this capitalist discourse in order to examine the relationship between women and technology.

A word from Tënk


A Robot of One’s Own is a short film that is both sensitive and striking, thoughtfully examining our relationship with technology and the gender stereotypes associated with it. Through a satirical mash-up of archival footage, Anne Gabrielle Lebrun Harpin highlights the intertwining of the domestic sphere—traditionally feminine—with the commercial logic of technological innovations. Loosely inspired by Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, this short film explores how women’s emancipation also involves a reconfiguration of their relationship with technical objects. This ironically charged montage reveals power dynamics, forms of isolation, and alienation that emerge within these contexts. In about ten minutes, the filmmaker opens a reflection that is both rich and nuanced on contemporary representations of technological progress, without ever resorting to a moralizing discourse.

 

 

Julia Minne
Programmer

 

 

Item 1 of 4
Item 1 of 4

Item 1 of 4