Past Events

E.g., Apr 29, 2024

Senior Scholars' Series

Sinking, Swimming, or Just Treading Water? Meeting the Challenges of an Academic Career in the Humanities
The son of refugees from Nazi Germany, Herbert Rosengarten grew up in a post-war Britain that saw radical changes to public health and education, and that offered new opportunities to the children of the working class through state funding. A sound, if somewhat conventional education led him to Vancouver and the English Department at UBC, just at the time when universities in North America were experiencing the first stirrings of student challenges to traditional authority. Rosengarten experienced the impact of such unrest at UBC, both in the changing attitudes and expectations of students, and in the workings of his department, which became a battleground between liberal and conservative factions, each striving to impose its notions of academic governance. The latter part of his career has been spent largely in administrative posts, which have given him some interesting, if not always positive, insights into the intricacies of academic politics.

Co-sponsors: Emeritus College and Green College; organizer Emeritus Professor Ken Carty. For more, see www.greencollege.ubc.ca. Come at 4:30 for tea and coffee in the Green College Piano Lounge and stay for refreshments after the talks. To attend dinner, please make a reservation no later than noon on the business day before the day on which you want to dine. Without prior reservation, we cannot guarantee that you will be served. Pay for your meal at the servery counter by cash, debit or credit (MasterCard, Visa). For reservations call 604-822-0912, or email kitchen@gcdining.ca

Thursday, 12 March 2020 - 5:00pm to 6:30pm
6201 Cecil Green Park Road.
Green College Coachhouse
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
Canada

Celebrating Research by UBC Emeriti Seminar

The seminar will include talks by UBC Emeriti George Bluman (Mathematics), Susan Barr (Food, Nutrition and Health) and Richard Unger (History).
More information, including link for registration for lunch (members only) and session, is available at our website.

Monday, 2 March 2020 - 12:30pm to 3:45pm
6331 Crescent Road
Peter Wall Institute, room 307
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada
Photo Group

Photo Group

The theme for this meeting is "Getting Older". Meetings are a mix of showing member images and informal discussions of particular photographic issues. We welcome both newcomers and seasoned photographers. Everyone welcome whether you wish to submit images or just look and socialize.
Contacts: Derek Applegarth (derek.jenny@shaw.ca) and Mike Whitfield.

Friday, 28 February 2020 - 4:00pm to 5:30pm
HA 135 main floor, Henry Angus Building, 2053 Main Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada
rose garden

Poetic Odyssey

All who are interested in writing, reading or listening to poetry are welcome. 
Contacts: Philip Resnick (Professor Emeritus, Political Science) and George McWhirter (Professor Emeritus, Creative Writing).

Wednesday, 26 February 2020 - 2:00pm to 4:00pm
room 201 (on second floor), Ponderosa Annex F
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

Film Group

Series Ten: With their supposed idiosyncratic personalities, yet paradoxically broad-based fandom, artists (across all disciplines) have been frequent subjects of the popular cinema since its early days.  For example, Vincent Van Gogh has had numerous films produced about his life, continuing even in recent years.  Because they seem above the ordinary, artists fascinate us: their specialness offers a glimpse of a more brilliant existence for ourselves.  Such a glimpse, however, can be a trap not only for us, whose dreams of a more intense life are easily exploited by a consumerist society eager to fulfill them, but especially for the artists themselves, whose humanity as well as their artistic contribution can be cheapened.

Film Group

February 25 – Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach (1967), directed by Jean-Marie Straub, decenters the story of the great composer by shifting the focus to his second wife through voice-over readings from her diary. Along with these readings (concerned with day-to-day activities from the composer’s life) the film offers a wealth of Bach’s music, presented “not as commentary [as it usually is in films] but as aesthetic material itself” as Straub himself explained. Further challenging convention, the music is exhibited unadorned, so as not to detract from its power.

When: Tuesday, February 25, 2020 at 3:30pm
Where: Room 135, Earth Ocean Sciences Main Bldg, 6339 Store Road

Tuesday, 25 February 2020 - 3:30pm to 5:00pm
Room 135, Earth Ocean Sciences Main Bldg, 6339 Store Road
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4
Canada

Philosophers' Café

What do Canadians expect from Democracy?
Democracy (rule by the people) is a “taken for granted” concept in Canada. But from Athenian democracy through Magna Carta to the Enlightenment the concept has evolved and continues to do so. Is there a process for updating the rules of democracy? Freedom of assembly and speech, inclusiveness and equality, equitable taxes, consent, voting, right of life and minority rights are all questions that need to be resolved in the public square. Even the question of who “the people” are and how authority is shared among us is controversial and bears directly on the kind of democracy Canadians deserve.

All Cafés are in the Tapestry classroom, 3338 Wesbrook Mall, starting at 10:30 am. After the Café join us for lunch at Tapestry by calling 604-225-5000 or by checking in at the front desk when you arrive to reserve a spot.

Friday, 21 February 2020 - 10:30am to 11:30pm
3338 Wesbrook Mall
Tapestry at Wesbrook Village
Vancouver, BC V6S 0A5
Canada

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