Motown South

By Samuel George
21min2025
LaborUnionsBattery Belt

In the new industrial heartland of the American South, electric vehicles are reshaping the economy—and workers are fighting for their fair share.

Award Ribbon

Global Peace Film Festival

2025
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Canadian Labour International Film Festival

2025
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JACKSON DOC FEST

2025
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JXN Film Festival

2025
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Macon Film Festival

2025
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The Workers Unite Film Festival

2025
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Reel Work Labor Festival

2025

About the Film

Take a left off of the Anacostia Freeway on to Firth Sterling Ave in Washington, DC – what do you see? You see empty fields. You see shiny new buildings just breaking ground. Construction equipment. Sweeping views of the capital. As one community member states in this film, if you are a developer, you see a gold mine. But these empty fields hold powerful memories. Enslaved people once worked this land. Later, during Reconstruction, the formerly enslaved purchased it, and built one of DC’s first thriving Black communities.

Here, the city constructed a sprawling public housing complex in the 1940s, beloved by insiders, if notorious to outsiders. Here, the movement for Welfare Rights took shape. Here, the Junkyard Band honed its chops on homemade instruments before putting a turbocharge into the city’s Go-Go music. Here, residents lived in the Barry Farms Dwellings up until 2019, when the final community members were removed for the redevelopment. This documentary film, a collaboration between The Bertelsmann Foundation and the DC Legacy Project, tells this story; of a journey for community, land, and for justice. It is a story of Barry Farm, but it is also a story of Washington, DC. And, in the cycles of place and displacement, it is a story of the United States of America.

Barry Farm