Upcoming Events
Green College Series on Intergenerational Trauma
epigenetics: how nature and nurture together shape our offspring
Moshe Szyf
Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University
Judith G. Hall
Professor Emerita of Medical Genetics and Pediatrics (2012)
Marvin Westwood - Convenor
Professor Emeritus of Educational and Counselling Psychology and Special Education (2015)
Topic: Epigenetics: How Nature and Nurture Together Shape our Offspring
Time: Tuesday, September 21, 2021, 5:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
Green College link
Co-sponsors: Emeritus College and Green College
Tuesday, 21 September 2021 - 5:00pm to 6:30pmTravel Group September 23, 2021
Travels in the 1970 and 1980s to Iran, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, Presented by William T. Ziemba, Professor Emeritus of Commerce and Business Administration
Bill will describe his travels by road in 1970, 1973 and 1974 through Eastern Turkey into Iran and Afghanistan, with visits to Ghom, Isfahan and Tabriz in Iran and Kabul, Bamiyan, Band-e Amir lake and Mazar-i-Sharif in Afghanistan. He will also describe a later trip in 1982 from Moscow to Samarkand, Bokhara and Shahrisabz in Uzbekistan. During his travels, Bill developed an interest and expertise in Oriental rugs, which he will discuss during his presentation.
If you are currently not on the email list of the EC travel interest group and wish to receive our mailings, please contact Paul Steinbok at psteinbok@cw.bc.ca.
A zoom link will be sent out 2 days before each meeting.
Thursday, 23 September 2021 - 3:00pmGroves of Academe - September 23, 2021 *Please note schedule change*
This is the first meeting of the Emeritus College Reading Group - Groves of Academe - it was previously scheduled for Sep 22
READING: C.P. SNOW, The Two Cultures and The Scientific Revolution
If you are currently not on the email list of the Groves of Academe group and are interested in this or a possible second book group, please notify Christina Girardi at office@emerituscollege.ubc.ca
Thursday, 23 September 2021 - 3:45pmCouncil Meeting - September 29, 2021
The Council will meet online.
Wednesday, 29 September 2021 - 10:30am to 12:30pmFilm Group Sep 30, 2021
Series Thirteen – Systemic Racism
The films can be screened via the streaming sites listed with each film
Zoom discussions of each film will take place on: Thursdays: Sept 30, Oct 28 and Nov 25 at 4pm
Hosted by John LeBlanc
Series Thirteen: As a result of the US Civil Rights Movement of the 60s, the reality of racism in North America could no longer be ignored, but early attempts to come to terms with racism, such as in the 60s and 70s Sidney Poitier films, narrowly defined it as the product of deranged individuals. The recent Black Lives Matter protests, locating racism within society’s structures and institutions, such as the police, have forced us to confront the racism in the very nature of our cultures and national identity. These three films invite us to examine how the very founding of our nations and their ongoing development is grounded in racism, requiring a major self-confrontation and transformation in order to move beyond the paralysis that racism fosters. I Am Not Your Negro has the victims of racism explain its nature. Double Happiness and Beans provide a Canadian context (Asian-Canadian and Indigenous-Canadian, respectively) for the damaging impact of racism.
Sep 30 – I Am Not Your Negro (2016) – directed by Raoul Peck takes us into the psyche of a victim of racism, here the African-American writer James Baldwin. In developing the film, the director was given access to a previously unknown 30 pages of notes Baldwin had developed for an unrealized book on the intersecting lives of Martin Luther King Jr, Medgar Evers and Malcolm X. May be streamed through the UBC Library Catalogue or the Vancouver Public Library Kanopy streaming sites. Suggested additional viewing: Frantz Fanon: Black Skin, White Mask – directed by Isaac Julien and Mark Nash and Ninth Floor directed by Mina Shum. Both can be streamed through the UBC Library Catalogue.
Oct 28 – Double Happiness (1993) – directed by Mina Shum, on the surface seems to be a simple family situation comedy but is, in fact, a sophisticated analysis of systemic forces that perpetuate racism against Asians in Canada. Focusing on a Chinese-Canadian family living in Vancouver and, in particular, on an aspiring actress (played by Sandra Oh), the film reveals the bind in which Asian Canadians often find themselves: both too Asian and not Asian enough. In particular, the film explores how the media perpetuates this bind while claiming to be Asian-positive. May be streamed through the UBC Library Catalogue streaming site. Suggested additional viewing: The Joy Luck Club directed by Wayne Wang. May be streamed through the UBC Library Catalogue.
Nov 25 – Beans (2021) – directed by Tracey Deer fictionalizes the director’s personal experience as a 12 year old during the 1990 Kanehsatake / Kahnawake crisis, a defining moment in Canada’s relationship with its Indigenous peoples. This crisis, developing out of the ongoing appropriation of Indigenous land in the Montreal / St Lawrence River region and resulting blockade revealed the racist nature at the heart of the Canadian settler project and its governing institutions. Deer’s return to this pivotal moment assists us in dealing with Canada’s past and moving forward into a more inclusive Canadian future. This film is playing at VanCity Theatre Sept 10-16: info at viff.org. Streaming options TBA. Suggested additional viewing: Alanis Obomsawin’s four documentary films dealing with the crisis: 1)Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance, 2)Rocks at Whiskey Trench, 3)My Name is Kahentiiosta, and 4)Spudwrench: Kahnawake Man. All four can be streamed through the UBC Library Catalogue.
To join the group, please email john.leblanc @ ubc.ca
International Day of Older Persons: Healthy Ageing
Emeritus College and European partners share healthy ageing insights
Please click here for recording of this event
Keeping fit and feeling well into the post-retirement years is a hot topic these days. Nearly 10 percent of the world’s population is 65 or older, according to the United Nations, and that is projected to rise to 16 percent – or one in six people – by 2050. So as we are living longer, how do we stay vital and energetic? How do we continue to contribute meaningfully to the community? And how do we keep our minds sharp? Those are just some of the issues experts will address at the Oct. 1 global panel discussion entitled, “Healthy Ageing.”
Co-sponsored by UBC Emeritus College and the European Association of Professors Emeriti (EAPE), an Athens, Greece-based organization, the session spotlights the UN’s “Decade of Healthy Ageing” (2021-2030) and International Day of Older Persons on Oct. 1. It also marks the first international collaboration for Emeritus College, started in 2018 as a resource supporting UBC faculty and senior academic administrators in the transition to retirement through academic work, mentoring, research and publishing.
Two Emeritus Professor speakers each from UBC and EAPE will speak, followed by a panel discussion. Professor Luigi Campanella, a prominent chemist from Sapienza University of Rome and Associate Professor Emeritus and Vice-president-elect of the Emeritus College Anne Junker, an MD and rare diseases clinician in immune deficiency disorders, are moderating the panel, which features UBC’s Dr. Judith Hall and Dr. John Helliwell.
Panelists
Canadian Medical Hall of Famer Dr. Judith Hall, OC, MD, DSC, FRSC and FCAHS, will draw from her research to explore the topic: Do emeriti have the opportunity for a new stage in their academic career?
UBC Emeritus Professor of Economics Dr. John Helliwell, OC, FRSC, and co-editor of the World Happiness Reports will speak about key supports for happy and healthy ageing.
From EAPE, Hannover, Germany’s distinguished pediatrician Emeritus Professor Jochen Ehrich (link to PDF), MD, DCMT (London) will delve into "the needs and wants of children and elderly people concerning healthy ageing,” contending that preventative measures have to start early in life to allow for healthy ageing
EAPE President-elect and Emeritus Professor Sir Les Ebdon will explain the value of adult education as it relates to health. With titles including CBE, DL, DSc, DUniv, CChem and FRSC, Dr. Ebdon is an award-winning analytical chemistry researcher and senior educator. For his contribution to education and social mobility he was knighted by Her Majesty the Queen in 2018.
"Healthy Ageing" global panel discussion
Friday, October 1, 2021
9-11am PST | 19:00-21:00 Athens | 18:00-20:00 Paris | 17:00-19:00 London