Vivian Norris de Montaigu is based in Paris and holds a PhD, focusing on Cinema Studies, and wrote a dissertation on Globalization and Media. She has worked with both contemporary art and film for the last twenty-five years, curating both art collections and film festivals. Dr. Norris de Montaigu is co-producing a feature film based on the uplifting work of the Grameen microcredit Bank and Muhammad Yunus and the women who are empowered by microcredit. The team works closely with Muhammad Yunus and Grameen. She more recently began shooting a documentary with Prof. Gloria Origgi of CNRS, on how the extraordinary life of Obama's mother, Ann Dunham, paralleled major social and cultural changes of the past fifty years.

Dr. Norris de Montaigu has also worked creating bridges between the film industry and education side, lecturing on uses of cinema in the classroom, helping create a Film Studies program and organizing conferences linked to film festivals. She co-founded a festival which focus on cinema by women directors and has curated other festivals internationally. Dr. Norris de Montaigu supports the citizen photo news site demotix.com and is currently focused on alternative distribution and networking between NGOs, grassroots organizations, and others, in order to help audiences access vital content.

Dr.Norris de Montaigu's Post-doc research into the Future of Digital Distribution, and the Oil and Biotechnology Industries link the economic, social and ethical realities brought about by a world which is both a beneficiary and victim of globalization. She has also been an Outsider Art enthusiast since she first saw works by Adolf Wolfli in Europe in 1987.

In terms of US owned media, specifically cinema, Dr. Norris de Montaigu spent years researching how it is viewed and absorbed by various cultures, who controls it, and how to begin to make both content and access more democratic. Having studied, worked and lived between the US and Europe for many years, she has observed and written about international approaches and solutions to various problems. After many years teaching, working with film, film festivals, women’s issues and non profits, she now combines her interests by producing and directing feature films and documentaries which combine these interests.

Blog Entries by Vivian Norris de Montaigu

Why Not Just "Ethical Businesses" Must Truly Be Ethical

Posted November 22, 2009 | 08:38 PM (EST)


Now more than ever, with the stress and pressures of job loss due to the financial crisis, the concept of "Ethical Business Practices," especially in the areas of social business, microfinance and free trade, must indeed meet higher standards. And many of these great organizations such as the Grameen Bank,...

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Mad Men and the Decline of America

14 Comments | Posted November 16, 2009 | 11:34 AM (EST)


The opening credits of Mad Men are the most disturbing and haunting for me. It is 9/11 and the images of the businessmen falling from the twin towers. Yet they are falling past images of consumerism and ads which sell the "best" of America ... in silhouette.

My father was...

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Art Brut Goes Mainstream

1 Comments | Posted November 9, 2009 | 12:09 PM (EST)


I was very happily surprised in New York last week to see an example of "art brut" or outsider art -- a piece by Henry Darger -- hanging alongside works by Beuys and other "mainstream" artists who are well appreciated by the "official" art market. In a period...

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Sexism and the Workplace: Have We Come a Long Way (Baby)?

109 Comments | Posted October 24, 2009 | 01:44 PM (EST)


We need to stop listening to our mothers who tell us that if we want something from a man we have to be subtle enough to make them think they actually came up with the idea in the first place! We should take Norway as an example to follow and...

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Something You Should Know About Profits, Vaccines and Tort Reform

8 Comments | Posted October 9, 2009 | 10:25 AM (EST)


According to foodconsumer.org:

Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has not only given immunity to the makers of Tamiflu and Relenza for injuries stemming from their use against swine flu, she has granted immunity to future swine flu vaccines and 'any associated adjuvants.' The last time...
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President Obama, His Mother Ann Dunham and the Nobel Peace Prize

11 Comments | Posted October 9, 2009 | 08:47 AM (EST)


After the birth of my daughter, the happiest days of my life were when microcredit pioneer, Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006, and Barack Obama was elected President of the United States of America. Now, once again the sagesse of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee in Oslo...

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The Narcissistic Ego and Vampire Economy

96 Comments | Posted October 6, 2009 | 01:03 PM (EST)


Last March, Dr. Drew Pinsky wrote about "Narcissism and the Economic Crisis?" for the Huffington Post.

And I think it is time to look even more deeply into this disturbing trend. There are simply more and more narcissists than there were a few decades ago. There is less community...

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Anti-Globalization Is Back! Police vs. the People and the "Pirates"

8 Comments | Posted September 27, 2009 | 03:38 PM (EST)


"A single ruler could, by fiat, decide which enemies were legitimate representatives of a state and which, by contrast, were mere 'bandits'..." - Daniel Heller-Roazen, The Enemy of All: Piracy and the Law of Nations

In June of 2001, I was in Gothenburg, Sweden, to witness both then...

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Are We Happier in France? An Expat Explains

21 Comments | Posted September 15, 2009 | 12:11 PM (EST)


The latest news from the Bruni-Sarkozy here in Paris household is that the French might start officially measuring more than just the GDP, but will begin accounting for, well, happiness.

So I began thinking about how happy I am living in France. Well, we earn a lot less salary-wise, but...

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Sharpening the Saw: The End of Summer and Back to Work

Posted September 1, 2009 | 08:38 AM (EST)


This tiny village near the Cap Lardier protected coastline in the South of France is the perfect place to spend the last week of summer. These past two months have been draining, more work and less sleep than I had imagined. It is only now, during this final week before...

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Wall Street: A (Sometimes Deadly) Insiders Game

6 Comments | Posted July 18, 2009 | 11:32 AM (EST)


I grew up in a place where many of the young men and women I went to high school with considered a future in the financial industry. Some went on to get MBAs, some are money managers, some bankers, some deal makers. I am very interested by Economics, and the...

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Love is Free

2 Comments | Posted July 9, 2009 | 06:13 PM (EST)


Last summer now seems to have had an air of Great Gatsby-ish endings, and now a bittersweet cooler summer wind blows. The warmth still reaches us, by human means now, not accouterments, and we need one another now more than ever to keep warm. We are indeed all connected, and...

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An Ode to Summertime

1 Comments | Posted June 25, 2009 | 12:23 PM (EST)


My daughter and I spent the solstice in the heart of Paris, first at the Swedish Cultural Center with its May pole, childrens' songs and dances, flower wreaths on their heads...and then moved from courtyard opera concerts to street corner jazz with masses of friends and Parisians as June 21...

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Health Care: France & the U.S., Social Security and the Single-Payer Model

7 Comments | Posted June 19, 2009 | 12:01 PM (EST)


A good friend of mine, Brigitte Marti, a French scholar living in the US, is married to a French doctor who works both at Johns Hopkins and in a French hospital, and has been organizing meetings with concerned citizens and the US Congress for some time to discuss the future...

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Microfinance as a Solution: Beggars, Thieves, AIDS and Prostitution

2 Comments | Posted June 18, 2009 | 11:00 AM (EST)


I recall Muhammad Yunus talking about how the workers at the Grameen Bank loved working with the beggar program, which extends tiny microloans to beggars to help them buy things they can sell door to door. Dr. Yunus' patience with this wonderful program was exemplified when he would respond...

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Cannes 2009: A Return to Normalcy

Posted May 24, 2009 | 05:51 PM (EST)


I spent a few years working with film festivals, and because of the stress, the endless needing to schmooze, entertain, deal with egos etc etc, I simply checked out. It did not seem to be enough about the movies and filmmakers and creative talent, but more about buzz and parties...

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"Money! Money! Money! -- Cannes Announces Film on Muhammad Yunus"

1 Comments | Posted May 17, 2009 | 03:38 PM (EST)


An Uplifting Story for a World in Financial Crisis! The multi-talented Phyllida Lloyd, director of Mamma Mia!, the highest grossing film ever made by a woman (and a team of women at that) has attached herself to the development of a feature fiction film based on the spread of microcredit...

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Trust Is the Answer: Yunus and the Future of Everything

5 Comments | Posted April 29, 2009 | 12:48 PM (EST)


One thing I learned very early on during these past few years of meetings with Muhammad Yunus is that he TRUSTS people, and because of that, people trust him. He trusted poor women with no collateral and gave them microloans, and they proved to him that they could pay back....

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An Expat's Week in America: Health Care, Yunus, Grameen and Broadway

Posted April 22, 2009 | 01:41 PM (EST)


Arrival in Baltimore last week, where the life expectancy for some humans is lower than that in Bangladesh. Riding public transport, light rail, train and metro to the World Health Care Congress in D.C., where Bangladeshi Banker to the Poor Muhammad Yunus taught doctors and CEOs in the health industry...

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Obama's Trip to Europe

Posted April 1, 2009 | 05:15 PM (EST)


There are a great many similarities between two US presidential trips to global meetings, overlapping with their first trips to Europe during their presidencies. In June of 2001, then President George W. Bush, arrived in the Swedish coastal city of Gothenburg, just prior to the EU meeting, and he somehow...

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