Summertime

Oh lazy days. The lack of activity on this blog is a perfect indication of what I am not doing now: work, school, anything mildly productive…

Yup, I’m now back in HK and just bumming the rest of my summer away. At first I was bored out of my wits, but I’m beginning to appreciate the pleasure of doing absolutely nothing at all.

Apart from studying Chinese. And reading books — for pleasure. (By the way, I didn’t really enjoy All I Ever Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten (15th Anniversary Edition) by Robert Fulghum or the Tales of the Otori trilogy by Lian Hearn. The first book of the trilogy started out quite well, but it just deteriorated from there. Which makes me sad.) And I suppose I should be studying for my driving test too. It’s only the written test which everyone tells me is so easy it’s embarrassing to fail. Which is why I don’t want to fail.

In between playing the piano and meeting up with high school friends, I’m going to write a post someday explaining why I think the fees for Herstmonceux are completely worth it, and highly recommend people to go if they have the opportunity.

Someday.

Course Registration: Complete!

Contrary to all my expectations and predictions, I’m now successfully registered in all the courses I want. What a pleasant surprise!

And I ended up registering for the Anthropology course on the EU. I figured that since it’s not on offer every year, I should go for it this time. (And my archaeological love really lies with the Old World in Paleolithic times.) It’s only in the second term so I can always change my mind if I like. Maybe I will go course-shopping! That’s actually quite fun in the first week and I have plenty of space and time to do that since I have no conflicting times.

Learning in University

My mother read me this Chinese joke which I thought was actually quite apt:

In your first year of university, you don’t know that you don’t know anything.
In your second year, you know that you don’t know.
In your third year, you don’t know that you know.
In your fourth year, you know that you know.

Well, so far I’m on track with that, but I really question getting to the third stage.

Course Contemplation

About two months ago, I made my perfect timetable for the 2008-09 academic year (which still hasn’t been upset by other people taking my spot — yet). With three English and one Chinese per term, and a science course in the first, that only leaves me enough space to select one elective for term 2.

Oh, the choices! After thinking about it for hundreds of minutes, I’ve narrowed my options down to six:

Anthropology 321: The Canadian Far West in Prehistory (Buchanan), MWF 9:00-10:00
Because I love cavemen and women and always want to know more about them. Because I also love British Columbia. Hopefully this is far west enough to include this love.

Central, Near Eastern and Religious Studies 307: Theories of Myth (Chem/Geog), TuTh 11:00-12:30
An examination of the origin, nature, transmission and interpretation of myths in the Western tradition, looking at theorists such as Freud and Jung.

Anthropology 303B: Ethnography of Special Areas (AnSo), MWF 3:00-4:00
In this case, studying the European Union and the challenges it faces, including ethnic conflict, historical memory, and the construction of national identity. (For some reason, Genevieve passed across my mind while I was looking at this.)

Religious Studies 306: Archaeology and the Bible (Neville Scarfe), MWF 3:00-4:00
Because I’m curious as to how these two interact with one another. Also because in IB, we did a mock history assessment of The Da Vinci Code. I rather hated that, particularly the accepting Dan Brown as a verifiable historical source. What.

Anthropology 202A: Contemporary Social Problems (AnSo Building), TuTh 3:30-5:00
While the prof is supposed to be good — actually, the profs of all these courses are supposed to be good according to RateMyProfs — the course doesn’t specify which region is being studied, and I can’t find it anywhere. Boo!

Sociology 240A: Introduction to Social Interaction (LSK), TuTh 3:30-5:00
Because I love people in general and am always interested in how they function, particularly when interacting with one another. I actually wanted to do some other Sociology and/or Family Studies courses but none of those fit in my timetable, so this is the closest I can get to those two.

Six courses for one spot: talk about competition.

My British Classes

On my computer desktop is a post-it note reminding me to submit my Course Request Forms which I should have done while I was in the UK, but oh well now. While I’m looking at that, I might as well talk about my classes!

Economics 111: Introduction to Microeconomics
The class that everyone who knows me stops to say, “What?” And then, “You?” Indeed. I’ve never been particularly interested in Economics, perhaps because my brother did it in high school and the textbooks were huge and boring to my eight- or nine-year-old eyes, and mostly because I was just interested in other things. Macroeconomics did crop up in one of my Anthropology 100 lectures last term though and I found myself wanting to know more about it. Unfortunately, macroeconomics wasn’t on offer at Herstmonceux, so I thought I’d go with microeconomics. I figured that since I’m in a different place I should try something I wouldn’t normally do at UBC. It’s good to know some basics anyway.

Much to my relief, this course was mostly theoretical comprehension and didn’t involve much maths. It’s definitely got to be my most succinct class of all — each class “block” is usually 1 1/2 hours long and most classes have 2 blocks put together so you’re in class for 3 straight hours. Our prof condensed it into a single block, though, and since there were only 3 people in the class — that’s right, just 3 — we managed to move the class up from 7:00 pm to 6:30 pm, so we could leave earlier too. (The original schedule had us in there from 7:00 to 10:20 pm. A bit brutal.)

English 262: Modern British Poetry & Drama
And of course I took an English class. I’m not that unpredictable. I’m not sure what I will do when I graduate and no longer take English classes. It seems impossible.

But this class was very good. We covered a whole range of poetry from World War I and T.S. Eliot’s “Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” (which, by the by, I still do not like all that much even after doing it in English 221 as well), and finished off with W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”. We also read Oscar Wilde’s play The Importance of Being Ernest, performed some Samuel Beckett, and watched a screen version of Joe Orton’s Entertaining Mr Sloane, a rather upsetting play if there is one. I found it very discomforting, anyway. I really encourage you all to look up “Ping” by Beckett and see what you think of it: that’s the play we had to perform and I had the honour of saying “ping!”

Our field trips were truly excellent and I am going to dedicate a whole new post to it later on this week. Our prof is the nicest guy: one of our blocks was a late night one from 9 to 10:20 pm, and he always brought cakes and/or cookies for us to munch on out of his own pocket. It was the sweetest gesture.

INTS 301: “The Mirror Class”
That’s not what it’s really called; the actual name is much longer, but this is what it became known as throughout the Castle (i.e. the students at the Castle). INTS stands for International Studies and should cover various European countries, but I think this class comes closer to Women’s and Gender Studies than anything else. It was my favourite class of all: the study of the mirror as a cultural symbol in art, literature, film, psychology, philosophy…

Oh, there are so many things about the mirror that we covered: the history of people’s perceptions of it, the duality of the mirror, self-portraits, the mirror as a border between two worlds… We read myths, fairy tales, a chapter from Harry Potter (guess which one!), The Picture of Dorian Gray, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, studied mirrors in art, watched an array of movies including snippets from Fight Club — my class consisted of six girls and we gathered together one night to watch one of the movies together (Dangerous Liaisons). We also went out to dinner together on the day of our last class at this really excellent Indian restaurant in the local village. Such a lot of amazing and admirable women. I think the world of them, and of our amazing prof, who is this lovely, kind-hearted soul.

I think I grew the most in this class — for example, I hate public speaking of all kinds (actually, I hate being in the spotlight in general; having a public blog makes perfect sense), but I managed to pull of two presentations, one 30 minutes long and the other about 60-70. Neat, eh? This class really brought out the feminist side of me — out of all of us, I think. (We ate a bar of chocolate together; the packaging says, “Not for girls!”, which outraged us and is a marketing ploy to outrage us to buy it, I daresay. Which worked the first time but not anymore since it was just chocolate and there was nothing good about it.)

And if you ever want to know if you are looking at a double-sided mirror where the people on the other side can see you, here is a trick: if you put your finger to the mirror and there is a gap between your finger and its reflection, then it’s one-sided; if you put your finger up and it’s directly touching the reflection without there being any sort of gap, then the person on the other side can see you.

There, now you will know when not to flex your muscles!