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zo 08.03
zo 08.03
In addtition to this program:
What is your role in the patriarchy? In what ways do you reinforce it, and how can you challenge it? Together with Suus ter Braak, we will explore these questions.
In addtition to this program:
What is your role in the patriarchy? In what ways do you reinforce it, and how can you challenge it? Together with Suus ter Braak, we will explore these questions.
In collaboration with LUX, InScience – International Science Film Festival presents a special program for International Women’s Day, exploring the boundaries of intimacy through the lens of health, gender, and power.
This event is in English.
Historically, science shaped by patriarchy has treated female existence as secondary: responsible for reproduction, sidelined in research, and stripped of desire. Marking International Women’s Day, this sharp short film programme probes those blind spots, asking how science, medicine, technology and society might finally begin to care for women’s bodies on their own terms.
On Health brings together film, science, and conversation to examine how gender roles, prejudice, and systemic inequality shape our experiences of health, reproduction, and bodily autonomy. Through short film screenings and moderated discussions with invited experts, the programme creates space for critical reflection on vulnerability, care, and the political structures that influence them.
The afternoon is structured around three film screenings followed by an in-depth conversation. Taboo: The Unspoken Truth About Women’s Health confronts persistent inequalities in healthcare, highlighting how women — particularly women of colour — are disproportionately affected by systemic neglect. The second film, It’s Different for Girls, looks toward the future of contraception and reproductive responsibility, questioning how care, power, and accountability might be redistributed in a changing political landscape. Moderator Iris Romeijnders will discuss the urgent themes in these films with the audience and with doctor and professor primary care at the RadboudUMC Sabine Oertelt-Prigione. The programme will conclude with the film Girls are made to make love.
InScience and LUX invite audiences to reflect together on urgent questions surrounding health, the body, and equality, not only as scientific or medical issues but also as profound social and political ones.
1u 51m
1u 51m
Iris Romeijnders challenges people to examine their own knowledge, motivations, and assumptions in a empathetic, curious, and humorous way. Her expertise lies primarily in art, culture, philosophy, gender, religion, and sense of purpose.
Sabine Oertelt-Prigione is Professor of Gender in Primary and Transmural Care at Radboud University Medical Center. She specializes in internal medicine, gender medicine, and public health, with a professional focus on the implementation of sex and gender issues in research, medical care, and organizations.
Salima El Guada is an expert in diversity, inclusion, and intercultural work. She works as an advisor at the anti-discrimination agency Vizier in Gelderland.