Skin Deep
53 minutes, 1995 , United States
Producer/Director: Frances Reid
Academy Award nominated filmmaker Frances Reid follows students from the University of Massachusetts, Texas A&M, Chico State, and U.C. Berkeley to a challenging racial awareness workshop where they confront each other's innermost feelings about race and ethnicity. She also accompanies them back to their campuses and on visits home in an attempt to understand why they think the way they do.
Issues of self-segregation on campus, feelings of hurt and discrimination, conflicts over affirmative action, and ultimately, students' personal responsibility for making a difference all enter the interracial dialogue. The students eventually learn to hear each other, arrive at new levels of trust and understanding, and take their first tentative steps towards building community.
Skin Deep will trigger thoughtful discussion and encourage students to address the deep-seated barriers to building a campus climate which respects diversity. It is ideal for student development, residential life, counseling, and staff diversity training as well as courses in sociology, psychology, education, and ethnic and multicultural studies.
-- Dr. Reginald Wilson, Senior Scholar, American Council on Education
"Captures the attitudes, experiences, and beliefs behind racial conflict on campus...Reveals aspects of racial ideology and all of its contradictory elements. Points the way towards increased tolerance of diversity."
-- Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley
"Captures the subtle nuances and the raw simplicities of today's students struggling to deal with racial, ethnic, and cultural differences. This is an important work."
-- Troy Duster, University of California, Berkeley
Ways to Watch
Educational Streaming
Colleges, Universities, Government Agencies, Hospitals and Corporations.
Community Screening
Short-term use for small groups, organizations, or high school classes (under 100 participants, where no admission is charged).
Home Viewing
48-hour, personal rental for in-home use only, restrictions apply