Pepperdine Digital Commons - Seaver College Research And Scholarly Achievement Symposium: Intertidal - Documentary
 

Intertidal - Documentary

Presentation Type

Artwork

Presentation Type

Submission

Keywords

documentary, science, film, Hawaii, coral reef, algae

Department

Communication

Major

Screen Arts

Abstract

This documentary short is about pioneering Asian and Native Hawaiian marine biologists who are doing cutting edge science while also pushing to decolonize coral reef research by creating new models that prioritize local and indigenous communities. In shared spirit with their efforts, the making of the documentary has been an entirely co-created (participatory) process. While revealing the colonial legacy of parachute science, the film highlights the Hawaiian names for different types of limu (algae). Filmed entirely on location in Hawaii, the mode of storytelling is contemporary in its blending of vérité and exterior interviews, with strong visuals including challenging underwater macro imagery.

Faculty Mentor

Paul B. Kim

Funding Source or Research Program

Keck Scholars Program, Summer Undergraduate Research in Biology

Location

Waves Cafeteria

Start Date

11-4-2025 1:00 PM

End Date

11-4-2025 2:00 PM

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Apr 11th, 1:00 PM Apr 11th, 2:00 PM

Intertidal - Documentary

Waves Cafeteria

This documentary short is about pioneering Asian and Native Hawaiian marine biologists who are doing cutting edge science while also pushing to decolonize coral reef research by creating new models that prioritize local and indigenous communities. In shared spirit with their efforts, the making of the documentary has been an entirely co-created (participatory) process. While revealing the colonial legacy of parachute science, the film highlights the Hawaiian names for different types of limu (algae). Filmed entirely on location in Hawaii, the mode of storytelling is contemporary in its blending of vérité and exterior interviews, with strong visuals including challenging underwater macro imagery.