Dec 3, 2019

Dec 3, 2019

Music, Conscience, Education: Philosophy-Based Art and Art-Based Philosophy

Sam Rocha, Educational Studies
Coach House, Green College, UBC

Tuesday, December 3, 2019
5-6:30 pm
with reception to follow

In the series
Green College Special Lecture

https://greencollege.ubc.ca/civicrm/event/info?id=1082

Sam Rocha will share recorded and live selections from his recently released new album, Anamnesis, and discuss its philosophical implications for education.

Sam Rocha’s discography mirrors his publication record but he tends to spend most of his academic time talking about the latter. In this talk, he will begin from the recent release of his 2019 concept album, Anamnesis, to discuss its composition and inspiration by playing a few tracks from the album. From this point, he will offer a few notes on the concept that the album takes up as its title: anamnesis, a Greek word and Platonic idea that shares a twofold tradition in the realm of Roman Catholic liturgical theology and the philosophical idea that all knowledge is innate. These senses of the word are shown in this album in ways that can be artistically signalled to the listener, but Rocha will argue further that these notions of anamnesis lead from art pointing towards a philosophical notion of the conscience that has key implications for a philosophical understanding of education.

 

Coach House, Green College, UBC
6201 Cecil Green Park Rd
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
Canada

 

EDST Holiday Social 2019

Thursday, December 12th, 2019

2:00 – 4:00 p.m.

Ponderosa Commons Oak House Ballroom

Trilogies films

Information:
DOWNLOAD PDF

The Centre for Culture, Identity and Education — in collaboration with the EDST GAAs — are launching Trilogies. Trilogies is an initiative that brings together, three narrative films, each time by the same director, and focussing on the intersections of culture, politics, identity, and education. Each film stands complete and independent save in its relation to the general theme — i.e. culture, identity and education. Each screening is followed by a facilitated discussion which will examine intersections of culture, identity and education issues reflected in the screenings. The final screening, on Dec 6th, will allow us a reading across all three films.

In November and December three films by pioneer Senegalese filmmaker Djibril Diop Mambéty (Colobane, Senegal 1945 – Paris, France 1998) will be screened, followed by a facilitated discussion by CCIE co-directors.

Please RSVP for each of these events here.


Touki Bouki (1973, 85 minutes)

Friday, November 8, 6:00pm – 8:30pm, PCOH 2012

“Mory, a cowherd, and Anta, a university student, try to make money in order to go to Paris and leave their boring past behind.”


Hyenas (1992, 110 minutes) 

Friday, November 22, 6:00pm – 8:30pm, PCOH 2012

“Dramaan is the most popular man in Colobane [Senegal], but when a woman from his past, now exorbitantly wealthy, returns to the town, things begin to change.”


La petite vendeuse de soleil (The little girl selling the sun) (1999, 45 minutes) 

Friday, December 6th, 6:00pm – 8:30pm, PCOH 2012

“A girl sells copies of Soleil, the government paper.”


Please RSVP for each of these events here.  

Light refreshments will be offered. Events are all open to all.

For further details on each screening and the series, please see the attached event posters and the description below.

Description

The art of Senegalese director Djibril Diop (1945-1998) Mambety’s cinema lies in the tension created between the visual narrative and the aural narrative. His work has been considered hugely influential, and his films bridge Western practices of filmmaking and oral traditions from West Africa. Mambety’s film Touki Bouki is considered one of the foundational works of African cinema. Vlad Dima proposes a new reading of Mambety’s entire filmography from the perspective of sound. Following recent analytical patterns in film studies that challenge the primacy of the visual, Dima claims that Mambety uses voices, noise, and silence as narrative tools that generate their own stories and sonic spaces. By turning an ear to cinema, Dima pushes African aesthetics to the foreground of artistic creativity and focuses on the critical importance of sound in world cinema.

For a recommended reading in relation to Djibril Diop Mambéty’s work, please check the online title below.

Vlad Dima (2017). Sonic Space in Djibril Diop Mambety’s Films. Indiana: Indiana University Press.

 

Posters and access to trailers at the top. Feel free to disseminate

 

Congrats Roselynn Verwoord ISSOTL

Congratulations on Roselynn Verwoord’s (Educational Studies) recent success on being awarded an inaugural fellowship of the International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (ISSOTL). This award was presented earlier in Atlanta, Georgia, at their annual conference. Roselynn represents UBC and Canada internationally with 8 other Fellows from the UK, Canada, China, Singapore and the USA.

Roselynn’s contribution to SoTL has been evidenced through a dossier that is built upon a set of core values which include community engagement and global citizenship, collaboration as a fundamental process in building capacities for new ways of thinking, doing, and learning, and holistic, meaningful, intentional approaches to higher education. These nine fellows are at the vanguard of the ISSOTL Fellows program, which seeks to build communities and ecosystems animated by a generosity of spirit that animates all our endeavours, including mentorship, leadership, and a commitment to support established and emerging learners and scholars in the pursuit of knowledge creation and sharing.

Daylight Savings Ends Nov 3, 2019

Killam Faculty Research Fellowship

Killam Teaching Prize

Killam Postdoctoral Research Fellowships

Killam Doctoral Scholarships

Nov 18, 2019

 


Nov 18, 2019 4 – 6:30 pm
PCOH BALLROOM (Ponderosa Commons North Oak House)

 


When and why did we lose our capacity to sense and respond to these and other pressing threats to the possibility of continued life on the planet?

Record breaking forest fires, irreversible bio-diversity loss, exponential deforestation, atypical floods, droughts, and extreme weather, toxic substances in the soil and the water, harmful carbon trading practices, illegal invasions of protected territories…

Ninawa Huni Kui will present the analysis and the wake up call that have been issued by the Huni Kui people who, along with other Indigenous groups, are considered the Guardians of the Amazon forest in in Brazil.

Talk sponsored by Dr. Vanessa Andreotti, CRC in Race Inequalities and Global Change, Department of Educational Studies, the Faculty of Education, and Indigenous Teacher Education Program.

“Nature is not a commodity. It is alive. And it is sacred! ”

Chief Ninawa Huni Kui is the President of the Federation of the Huni Kui People in Acre, Brazil. He is the spokesperson for nearly 15000 Indigenous people in 104 villages across 12 indigenous territories in the state of Acre, in Brazil. Ninawa is also a medicine student at the Amazonian University of Pando, in Bolivia.

 

Suggested donation at the door: $10.
All proceeds go towards the Federation of the Huni Kui People in Acre, Brazil.