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How Life Looks Through 'My Whale Eyes'

 

 

A student film project at Duke鈥檚 Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) was turned this week into a 12-minute opinion video for the

In the film, James Robinson, who graduated in 2020, shows what it feels like to live with several disabling eye conditions that have defied an array of treatments and caused him countless humiliations. Using playful graphics and enlisting his family as subjects in a series of optical tests, he invites others to view the world through his eyes.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a problem with the way that I see,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y only problem is with the way that I鈥檓 seen.鈥

During a visit to CDS prior to his senior year in high school, Robinson heard Christopher Sims of CDS describe the center's philosophy. Robinson said he immediately knew this was where he wanted to be for his four years at college.

鈥淚 found myself photographing blacksmiths in rural North Carolina, and interviewing indigenous communities on the front lines of climate change in Louisiana. In these classes and through these experiences, I no doubt became a better photographer. But it was the life-lessons that struck the hardest鈥攍essons in gaining trust, coming to terms with one鈥檚 positionality, and finding how to get to the heart of a story, subject, or moment.

鈥淔our years into my Duke experience, I was feeling pretty comfortable behind the camera鈥攂ut in front of it, where my visual disability shone bright for all to see, I was nervous, scared and unsure of myself. In my final semester at Duke, I took Chris Sims鈥 capstone Doc Studies class, where I found a comfortable environment, conducive to taking personal risk. It gave me the opportunity to explore this disability from all angles and in all of its emotions鈥攑layful, serious, jovial, somber, and most importantly鈥攙ulnerable. I began by working with archival footage, then interviewed my family, and wove these aspects together with footage that I shot both at Duke, and later, after virtual learning began, in my home. 

鈥淚n my entire education, I鈥檝e never felt such permission to be unguarded. At the end of the Spring 2020 semester, I finished what was the first draft of Whale Eyes鈥攁 twenty-three minute film.鈥

At CDS, Robinson was awarded the John Hope Franklin Student Documentary Award, and the . His 10-minute film 鈥淟ouisiana鈥檚 Missing Coast鈥 won Duke鈥檚 Koonz Human Rights Award, and was later named a finalist for the Student Academy Awards. He worked on the film as part of where he was paired with his mentor, filmmaker and CDS alum Ryan White 鈥04. He now works for Ryan鈥檚 Tripod Media in Los Angeles.