eVideo
Kanopy
More Than a Fish Kill
Summary
In outback Australia, the Barka (the Darling River) is more than just a flow of water; it is a community of people and other species, a repository of culture and history, a practice of connection, a place for swimming and fishing and healing, and a gauge of how we are caring (or not) for Country. For the First Nations Barkindji people, who have lived as part of the river for tens of thousands of years, the waterway and its flourishing cannot be separated from their stories, identities and wellbeing. In 2019 and again in 2023, the unprecedented deaths of millions of fish along the Barka near Menindee, in far western New South Wales, signalled the river’s devastating decline. Film-maker Otis Filley captured these shocking events, documenting locals’ struggles with the stench of decaying fish, flooded homes, polluted drinking water, and their profound grief for their beautiful Country. Filley’s meticulous record sets the scene for MORE THAN A FISH KILL, as the film explores the Menindee region’s continuing fight for water justice and cultural survival. MORE THAN A FISH KILL traces how, in the wake of the Menindee fish kills, artists, scientists and First Nations custodians came together to form a remarkable collaboration. Over four years, regional artist-run organisation, The Cad Factory, worked with NSW Fisheries managers and the Barkindji and Wiradjuri communities to explore what it means when our rivers are sick. This surprising group of people collectively created a series of spectacular art events that bridged cultural and geographical boundaries to demonstrate how celebrating the values of waterways helps heal communities living with ecological catastrophe. The film traces how river mismanagement impacts cultural and emotional, as well as environmental, wellbeing. It also reveals how arts, science and ancient knowledges can be interwoven to bring people together to celebrate our places, strengthen our connections and create the kind of spaces that enable our collective navigation of this time of environmental crisis.
Subjects
- Political science.
- Social sciences.
- Science.
- Philosophy and religion.
- Anthropology.
- Australians.
- Foreign study.
- Biology.
- Environmental sciences.
- Documentary films.
- Indigenous peoples.
- Current affairs.
- Health.
- Spirituality.
- Aboriginal Australians.
- Environmental health.
- Ocean.
- Marine biology.
- Water--Pollution.
- Ecology.
- Australia--Politics and government.
- Australia.
- Water.
- lcgft