Monday, January 31, 2011

Orientation Week
        I also feel at home with the seagulls. They’re everywhere, in the streets and perching on lamps and buildings. They’re confusing the students from inland cities, but they remind me of the ones that flock to the Williamsburg parking lots back home. I think Belfast has more in common with Tidewater cities than it does with Asheville.
There are also flocks of schoolchildren in uniforms.
          The strangest thing about the city streets, though, is the way people park. In the States, you would see people in a narrow street simply parking in the middle of it. But in Europe, they’re more... polite? Accommodating? They park halfway in the street, so as to keep it clear - and halfway on the sidewalk. When pedestrians walk around the city and there are cars driving down the street, they have to skirt tilted parked cars, like these:

        The First Day
On our first full day, we were introduced to life and school at Queen’s, and enrolled in classes. We’re encouraged to attend both the tutorials and lectures – as one Professor Niall Majury was so kind to inform us:
“Research suggests that students who do not attend lectures do badly.”
I am enrolled in three modules for 60 CATS points, which is equivalent to four courses for 16 credits. They are:
Module Title: Irish Studies 11: The Modern History, Politics, Sociology and Anthropology of Northern Ireland
Course Contents :This level 1 module will use a variety of historical, political, sociological and anthropological perspectives to look at key issues relating to Northern Ireland. The course will provide an overview of the history and politics of the state of Northern Ireland. It will use anthropological understandings of ethnicity and nationalism to examine how Unionism and Irish Nationalism developed. It will look in detail at the various political solutions which have been applied to ‘the Province’, with a particular focus on the Peace Process. It will examine the realities and legacies of the conflict since the signing of the 1998 Agreement. It will explore the development of cultural and political 'traditions' examining, in particular, change and continuity in Irish society.

Module Title: Politics, Law and Power: From Duties to Rights

Course Contents :This module is concerned with politics in different kinds of societies throughout the world. It asks what 'politics' itself is, how it is related to other aspects of social life and to what extent it can be separated from them. With particular reference to non-Western societies, it investigates how political relations are maintained and reproduced in the absence of Western-type institutions. In particular, it addresses questions of power and subordination, authority and the legitimating use of (invented) traditions, and resistance, especially in relation to gender and colonial or postcolonial conditions. International debates about human rights concludes this module.
Module Title: The Irish Revolution, 1917-1921

Course Contents :The module will explore revolutionary politics in Ireland between 1916 and 1921. Key themes will include the rise of Sinn Fein following the Easter Rising, the establishment of Dail Eireann, the Irish Volunteers' military campaign and the British government's response to these political and military challenges. The course will make use of a wide range of local and thematic studies to investigate controversial questions relating to the Irish revolution: what factors motivated republicans, how important was sectarianism in revolutionary violence, why did some areas of the country see little fighting and how important a factor was the north?
The School of History and Anthropology is one of the academic schools in University Square, a row of very thin and tall houses in a compact line, past the School of Music. It’s beside the film theatre, and the seven of us who had to register there climbed up several narrow flights of stairs to wait in the hall for the one professor who had as all. When I sat in one of the chairs, the arm popped off – it’d been balanced in place. We agreed that this was a good indication, if we hadn’t know already that this was the history building, where we were, because historians don’t mind when things are old and falling apart.
I finished my registration with everyone else in the Peter Froggatt Centre. The information we had to provide was fairly straightforward, apart from one question I had trouble with: whether or not we’d like our contact information provided to the appropriate QUB chaplaincy. I said, sure. Then I looked down the dropdown list...
...!?
At Wilson, our chaplain and chapel are, at least, nominally Presbyterian. There is one small Christian student group. Here, most everyone and everything is Christian - but split over and over into who knows how many sects. There were FOUR different options for “Presbyterian.” This isn't as surprising when you walk around the city - in the Protestant areas of the city, there's a Presbyterian church every other block. But it's still a very different arrangement than in the States (where the church every other block would be Baptist).
After that, the tour. I won’t write at length about Queen’s University and its buildings and statistics – that’s what the website will tell you. However, I can provide some website links and some of my so-far photos.
Queen's University Belfast: http://www.qub.ac.uk/


Some pictures from around the city, mostly buildings (the gardens aren't too impressive this time of year):


7 College Gardens - my front door. My room is on the 1st floor (that is, the second) and faces the back.


 Some back views of Fitzroy Presbyterian Church. Like I said, there are churches like this one - big, beautiful stone buildings - every other block.

The corner building is the School of Music.


Just in case you forget you're in the UK.



A view of some houses... not the front car parked up on the curb.


Looking up at the right-hand archway at the Union Theological College of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland.

And, because this is Belfast, all this lovely Victorian stone-and-brick architecture is set with iron bars or topped with barbed wire...



4 comments:

  1. So which religion/chaplain did you choose?

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  2. Congregationalist. I haven't a clue which Presbyterian church is which, and I figured it was the closest thing there to "non-denominational." I can answer any confused questions that may arise later.

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  3. Back to family roots, Meghan. My family belonged to the Congregational Church in New England. It's Christian based but has no central ruling church hierarchy. Each congregation is self ruled. Each group is different and I hope you find some wonderful people there to meet the locals.

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  4. Yes, that's what I thought it was. I don't know if anyone will contact me or not. But I did sign up for the Christian Union (I think that's what they're called) at the club fair thing... hopefully I will meet some wonderful people. I've been going to the Presbyterian church down the road from the college - I'll have to post about it...

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