Past Events
Wine Appreciation Group | DATE CHANGE Mar 20
Part 2 of the "Understanding Wine" session with David McArthur
Tentative dates for Part 2: March 20th, April 18th, May 16th.
Timing of the later dates may change with input from members (i.e. switch to Tuesday nights).
Topics that may be covered in Part 2:
- Sensory training together with some interesting white/red varietals to help one recognize aroma/flavours
- Exploring regions of France
- Exploring how wines age (e.g. from BC, France, Australia…)
- A potluck
The Wine Appreciation Group has drop-in spaces available in this year's group. Please reach out to David MacArthur at david.mcarthur@ubc.ca to register.
Wednesday, 20 March 2024 - 6:30pmGroves of Academe | Mar 18
READING: Tanya Tagaq, Split Tooth
If you would like to join the group please contact convenor, Graeme Wynn (wynn@geog.ubc.ca).
* Please contact the convenor for more information or to be added to the group. By nature of the intimate sharing format of the group, membership size is limited.*
Monday, 18 March 2024 - 3:30pmVancouver Institute Lecture | Mar 16
THE FUTURE OF GLOBAL MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
with Dr. Zulfiqar Bhutta, Co-director and Director of Research, Centre for Global Child Health, Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children, Founding Director of the Institute for Global Child Health & Development at the Aga Khan University South Central Asia, East Africa and United Kingdom
Dr. Bhutta is a champion of integrated maternal, newborn, and childhood health globally. His work with community health workers and outreach services has influenced outreach programs for marginalized populations around the world. Among his multiple distinguished posts, Dr. Bhutta was a member of the UN Secretary General’s Independent Expert Review Group for monitoring global progress in maternal and child health. A fellow of the Royal Society and a member of the American National Academy of Sciences, Dr. Bhutta is one of the most highly cited academics in global health and has been ranked among the top 1% of Highly Cited Researchers globally. He is a recipient of the WHO Family Health award and the World Academy of Sciences award in Medical Sciences, the 2022 Gairdner Global Health Award, and the 2023 Friesen Prize in International Health Research.
Saturday, 16 March 2024 - 8:15pmPoetic Odysseys Group | Mar 12
The group welcomes members who write or enjoy poetry. Those interested in attending can contact convenor Philip Resnick, philip.resnick@ubc.ca for details on how to attend and to be added to the Poetry Group list.
Learn more about the group and their activities
Tuesday, 12 March 2024 - 2:00pmVancouver Institute Lecture | Mar 9
A PERFORMANCE BY SINGERS FROM THE UBC OPERA ENSEMBLE
Led by Nancy Hermiston
Professor Hermiston is a distinguished opera singer, stage director and educator. Her operatic career has taken her throughout Canada, the United States and Europe. She has held numerous appointments as a voice teacher, and as stage director at the Meistersinger Konservatorium, Nürnberg, and the University of Toronto Opera and Performance Divisions. In 1989 she founded the first women’s opera guild in Germany. She is a recipient of the prestigious 2011 Rubie Award by Opera Canada and the 2008 Dorothy Somerset Award for Performance and Development in the Visual and Performing Arts. Her Opera Ensemble, created in 1995, has collaborated with the Vancouver Opera, the Vancouver Symphony and different community groups, and performed in Europe, across British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Ontario. The Opera Program was awarded the 2011-12 Alfred Scow Award at UBC, which recognizes programs of excellence that enrich and enhance the UBC student experience.
Saturday, 9 March 2024 - 8:15pmStephen Straker Memorial Lecture | Mar 7
Still Listening to Prozac: STS, Rhetoric, and “Mental Health”
with Judy Z. Segal, Professor Emeritus, Department of English Language and Literatures
Please note this lecture begins at 5:00 pm.
Reception to follow in the Frederick Wood Theatre lobby. This lecture will be recorded.
Since the launch of STS at UBC—and with the wisdom of Stephen Straker—rhetorical studies of science, technology, and medicine have been central to the interests of the program. My own work has focused on rhetorical elements in the theories and practices of health and medicine. My topics have included, inter alia, persuasions at work in discourse on migraine, breast cancer, death and dying, illness anxiety, “female sexual dysfunction,” aging/ageism, and health justice. My interest in the rhetoric of diagnosis itself led to my current work on low moods and their meanings. My lecture will begin with a brief history of STS at UBC (I have the archive!) and notes on the contributions of rhetorical studies to the work of the program. I will then give an account of the cultural and material significance of the persuasiveness of Peter D. Kramer’s (1993) Listening to Prozac—and of Kramer’s public and sustained allegiance, 30 years on, to the theses of that book. The lecture will address some of the ways that circulating discourse about mental health—here, discourse on “disordered” moods—is taken up in individual selves and in populations.
Judy Z. Segal (she/her) is Professor Emeritus, Department of English Language and Literatures, University of British Columbia. She was, in 2002, Chair of the Provost’s Committee to Propose an STS Program at UBC; she was a founding faculty member in that program. She was, as well, a founder of Rhetoric of Health and Medicine as a field. Her essays appear in rhetoric journals, interdisciplinary health and STS journals, and medical journals—and in essay collections across disciplines; she is author of Health and the Rhetoric of Medicine (2005). Professor Segal has been a member of the President’s International Advisory Committee of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, a Distinguished Scholar at the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, and a recipient of a Killam Teaching Award. She is a member of the Advisory Panel on Medicine and Society for the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Thursday, 7 March 2024 - 5:00pm