Posted: May 19, 2006
This conference has been organized by CCGES’ student Lee Kuhnle and brings together graduate students from a number of Ontario and New York universities to consider and discuss the relationship between religion and the state in a variety of contexts, both historical and present, European and North American.
Time: 9:00 am – 6:00 pm
Location: 305 York Lanes
Posted: March 31, 2006
As part of the 150th anniversary celebrations of Sigmund Freud’s birthday, four York professor (Paul Antze from Social Science, Steve Bailey from Humanities, Christina Kraenzle from German and John O’Neill from Sociology) will hold a roundtable discussion on Freud’s continued relevance to scholarship and society in the 21st century.
Time: 4:00 pm
Location: 305 York Lanes
The event is presented by York’s Canadian Centre for German and European Studies in conjunction with the Paul Roazen Memorial Lecture Series.
Posted: March 30, 2006
As part of “Freud at 150 – Freud at York: New Directions”, Frank Scherer will give an illustrated lecture, “Freud’s ‘Via Regia’: A West-Eastern Journey into a Chapter of Central European History”. Scherer is a doctoral student in Social & Political Thought at York.
Time: 4:00 – 5:30 pm
Location: 230 York Lanes
This event is presented by York’s Canadian Centre for German and European Studies in conjunction with the Paul Roazen Memorial Lecture Series.
Posted: March 27, 2006
Talk with Thomas Sieverts, Emeritus Professor of University of Darmstadt and a former Fellow of the Institute of Advanced Studies in Berlin. He has lectured in planning and urban design in both the UK and the USA. He is a partner of SKAT Architects Town Planners in Bonn, and an advisor to the German government. He is the co-founder of the Ladenburger Kolleg which is dedicated to the in-depth study of Zwischenstadt (In-Between City).
Time: 12:30 – 2:00 pm
Location: HNES 140
Posted: March 26, 2006
CCGES and the Goethe-Institut Toronto co-present a podium discussion between Tom Sieverts (Bonn) and Gerda Wekerle (York U). Moderated by Roger Keil (CCGES York).
Professor Tom Sieverts, one of Germany’s foremost planning and architectural visionaries,has termed the emerging landscapes of the current period Zwischenstadt or the In-between-City. In his highly influential book by that title (1999 in German by Vieweg; 2003 by Routledge in English), Sieverts explores the new spaces “between place and world, space and time, city and countryside”. The resulting “cities without cities” have now started to capture the imaginations of planners, policy makers and the general public. They have become the focus of attention as urban hallmarks such as gridlock and diversity happen “out there”, too. In fact, as York University Professor Gerda Wekerle has observed in a long-term study of social and environmental change on the Oak Ridges Moraine here in Toronto, these “cities without cities” have become the object of contestation and grass roots politics, in which the social, cultural and ecological futures of the regional fringe have been redefined as urban problematics.
This panel will engage Professors Sieverts and Wekerle in a conversation about the future of the regional city in light of their work in Germany and Canada. We will ask about differences and convergences of European and North American tendencies. And we will explore the ways in which action by planners and citizens can best be organized to shape Zwischenstadt into a livable city.
Time: 7 pm
Location: Goethe-Institut Kinowelt Hall, 163 King Street West