Corona Care Package #55 | How Cities Will Change

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Tuesday’s post: How Cities Will Change
Monday’s post: A Conversation about Institutional Racism

Tuesday 16 June | How Cities Will Change

Cities are profoundly changed by crises. We wouldn’t have our modern sewage systems, paved roads, or waste management in cities without historical confrontations with cholera, typhoid, and the like. How will our cities change over the coming years?

If the 1.5m distance rule remains in effect, urban design is going to have to go through some drastic changes. The shutting down of many stores, cultural centers, even bars and cafes will also have a lasting impact on the look, feel, and experience of our cities. When the city changes, our way of life will follow, and vice versa. William Fulton, director of the Kinder Institute for Urban Research, notes some of the changes that are likely to happen in American cities, while Michael Safi at The Guardian takes a broader look at what’s happening around the world.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #54 | A Conversation about Institutional Racism

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Monday’s post: A Conversation about Institutional Racism

Monday 15 June | A Conversation about Institutional Racism

Our colleagues at X TU Delft are hosting an online Salon on the topic of institutional racism, Tuesday 16 June at 19:50 hrs on Zoom. In this Salon, we’ll discuss the Black Lives Matter demonstrations worldwide, including the Netherlands, with people protesting against institutional racism and ethnic profiling. You are invited to join the conversation to respectfully share your thoughts and experiences with other students regarding racism.

The murder of an unarmed suspect by a police officer in Minneapolis, US, catalysed ongoing protests of the Black Lives Matter movement worldwide. In the Netherlands, thousands of protesters gathered in cities such as Amsterdam, The Hague, Groningen and Rotterdam as a sign of solidarity with the movement in the United States, and to address institutional racism and ethnic profiling in the EU. Online, on social media platforms such as Instagram, people having been sharing statements and taking part in actions like #blackouttuesday.

Students and employees of the TU Delft are invited to share their thoughts and experiences on the subject. Why are they or aren’t they participating in the (online) protests? And what do they believe are solutions for the existing problems? We invite you to tag along and join the conversation.

The salon will be hosted on Zoom. You don’t need an X subscription to join and you don’t need to enrol. The event will start with a 5-10 minute Q&A held on X’s Instagram in which the event will be announced, starting at 19:50. To join the conversation, just zoom in via https://tudelft.zoom.us/j/99422252709?pwd=Q2F3cndDU3Rlcy9QcnZlSjdWTnY2QT09.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

CCP Extra | Het Filosofisch Café: de wetenschap achter meditatie

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CCP Extra: Filosofisch Café | Thursday 25 June
Wednesday’s post: Marjan Olfers on the de-democratisation of sports
Tuesday’s post: The Matrix Economy
Monday’s post: What You Can Do To Fight Racism

CCP Extra | Het Filosofisch Café: de wetenschap achter meditatie

Het lijken twee totaal verschillende werelden, zelfs tegenovergesteld. Terwijl er in de wetenschap gewerkt wordt aan feitelijk bewijs, lijkt meditatie op niets anders gestoeld dan onderbuikgevoelens. Maar er zit harde wetenschap achter de effecten van meditatie. In deze 1,5 Meter Sessie van Het Filosofisch Café duiken we in de bewezen wetenschappelijke effecten van meditatie met topneuroloog Steven Laureys. Via livestream geeft hij een lezing over hoe het werkt, wat het oplevert en hoe je zelf kunt beginnen. Met een live meditatiesessie door Maryvonne Verkerke (de Mindfulnessschool) om het zelf te ervaren!

Er zijn slechts 30 kaarten te koop voor in het theater, maar je kunt deze avond ook volgen via livestream. De link naar de livestream volgt zo snel mogelijk via onze website.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #53 | How the corona pandemic facilitates the de-democratisation of sports clubs

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Wednesday’s post: Marjan Olfers on the de-democratisation of sports
Tuesday’s post: The Matrix Economy
Monday’s post: What You Can Do To Fight Racism

Wednesday 10 June | How the corona pandemic facilitates the de-democratisation of sports clubs

“Sports are for everybody,” says professor Marjan Olfers (Sports & Law, UvA). But because of the corona pandemic something is happening to sports clubs at a small level, that simultaneously unfolds in politics and society: de-democratisation of clubs. During crises, we take privacy and regulations less seriously, and collaboration is harder, at the expense of the democratic level. Thus, inequality can grow. Sports can become an elitist or savvy lobbyist affair.
Watch the talk with Marjan Olfers here, it is in Dutch.

This talk is an edition by De Nieuwe Wereld TV (The New World), an online platform where people from different disciplines are brought together to think about big dawning changes because of technological developments and globalization. This is an initiative by journalist Paul van Liempt, philosopher Ad Verbrugge and David Overbeek and is produced in co-operation with the VU, Centrum Ethos and the Filosofische School Nederland.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #52 | The Matrix Economy

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Tuesday’s post: The Matrix Economy
Monday’s post: What You Can Do To Fight Racism

Tuesday 9 June | The Matrix Economy

Writing for RT, the communist philosopher Slavoj Žižek takes a stab at the fully digitized lifestyle that corona quarantine has accelerated. Especially in New York, where governor Cuomo has invited Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt and Microsoft founder Bill Gates to “re-imagine” education, infrastructure, and more. Žižek sees this as a big step towards a Matrix like reality, where everything is mediated not by people, but by screens and machines.

Can you picture it? A society without touch?

We have all the infrastructure in place. The privileged among us can work/study from home; get groceries, meals, and any consumer items delivered to our doorstep; get our news, friends, and entertainment online. We can be self sufficient with potable water, sewage, waste disposal, solar panels, and so on. We’re entering a reality where, if you’re wealthy enough, you never have to leave home.

Žižek asks us two important questions. If our lives are lived almost exclusively online, should the networks that facilitate that life be in the hands of private companies? Or should they be in the hands of the public? And secondly, while we sit at home sipping our delivery Mojito, what happens to the underprivileged servicing all the needs of the Matrix lifestyle? How much longer will we treat care professionals and supermarket clerks as heroes before they go back to being invisible?

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #51 | What You Can Do To Fight Racism

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Monday’s post: What You Can Do To Fight Racism

Monday 8 June | What You Can Do To Fight Racism

In recent weeks, we have witnessed some of the best, but also worst sides of humanity, which can have its effects on our own mental health and wellbeing. Being stuck at home, it is understandable that recent events can leave us feeling powerless to help and effect change in the world.

Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world (Nelson Mandela). How you can help is first of all to listen and to educate yourself. This five minute video contains links to a ton of resources, including articles, podcasts, books and films.

Check out this list of resources, many of which have even been converted into a daily lesson plan. Or get started straightaway with this selection of free courses on race, inequality, and social justice curated by online learning platform Coursera.

A collection of resources in Dutch is available at www.withuiswerk.nl

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #50 | The puzzling side effects of corona

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Friday’s post: The puzzling side effects of corona
Thursday’s post: Ad Verbrugge on never ending life: gift or curse?
Wednesday’s post: Reading Theatre Plays
Tuesday’s post: How different generations are responding to COVID-19
Monday’s post: The corona app: solution to our problems or a big mistake?

Friday 5 June | The puzzling side effects of corona

During lockdown in the United Kingdom, an obscure YouTube channel featuring a soft-spoken middle-aged man and low production values has gone viral and now has people all over the world hooked on solving Sudoku puzzles. Feed your inner nerd and join a growing community of puzzle fanatics!

In an interview with The Guardian newspaper, Simon Anthony, who is one of the two puzzle champions behind the channel, expresses his surprise and delight at their recent success. It is certainly no coincidence that they have suddenly reached a new audience, as they have received many messages from people for whom the channel has been beneficial for their mental health during these trying times.

They have also had surprising endorsements from some unlikely YouTube heavyweights who have revealed themselves as puzzle enthusiasts, including make-up artist James Charles and music producer Kurt Hugo Schneider, who are good for over 30 million subscribers and 5 billion views between them.

Anthony’s latest hit is The Miracle Sudoku, a strangely compelling 25-minute video in which he takes on a seemingly impossible grid. Make sure to check out their channel Cracking the Cryptic.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #49 | Ad Verbrugge on never ending life: gift or curse?

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Thursday’s post: Ad Verbrugge on never ending life: gift or curse?
Wednesday’s post: Reading Theatre Plays
Tuesday’s post: How different generations are responding to COVID-19
Monday’s post: The corona app: solution to our problems or a big mistake?

Thursday 4 June | Ad Verbrugge on never ending life: gift or curse?

Who’s afraid of the end of life? Nowadays we all seem to be afraid of dying. The way we cope with the pandemic seems to say something about our tendency to hold on to life as long as we possibly can. We’d rather stay in a cage (our own home) in order to live longer, than to just live.

According to philosopher Ad Verbrugge (UvA) there is value and beauty in having an end to your life. He rather focuses on leading your life here and now and accepting the end when it comes, than to strive for banishment of all disease and death. ‘There seems to be confusion about how eternal life implies the banishment of death. But death is an integral part of life and thus we will never succeed in banning it.’

In February 2020 Studium Generale organised three events within the TU Delft Library programme ‘Who’s afraid of the end of life. Exploring and (re)designing values on (im)mortality’. This lecture was part of the event ‘Never ending life: gift or curse?’ together with the study associations of Nanobiology, Life Science & Technology and Clinical Technology.

This lecture is in Dutch.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: #MentalHealth, #TheWorldAfterCorona, #ArtsCulture, #ClipsLectures, #CasualFriday.

Check out the entire programme of ‘Who’s afraid of the end of life?’ here:
https://www.tudelft.nl/en/library/about-the-library/tu-delft-library-presents/who-is-afraid-of-the-end-of-life/

Corona Care Package #48 | Reading theatre plays

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Wednesday’s post: Reading Theatre Plays
Tuesday’s post: How different generations are responding to COVID-19
Monday’s post: The corona app: solution to our problems or a big mistake?

Wednesday 3 June | Reading theatre plays

Missing theatre and have had enough of staring at a screen? Feel like reading, but fed up with novels? Try reading a script, or hey, if you’re up for it, rehearse something with your roommates. De Nieuwe Toneelbibliotheek made hundreds of theatre plays available as pdf and a lot of them are for free. Paint your own play in your head by reading just the script.
We’ve selected the page with foreign language plays for you. For example, check the play ‘AMSTERDAM’ by the Israeli playwright Maya Arad Yasur.

The play AMSTERDAM unfolds the course of 24 hours in the life of a 9 months pregnant Israeli violinist living in Amsterdam, the day she wakes up and finds an unpaid gas bill from 1944 on her doorstep. The multiple speakers accompany the absent character throughout the day on which she tries to keep her regular routine while the gas bill is hiding in her bag like a ticking bomb, shattering her consciousness into pieces, awakening sentiments of collective identity, minority awareness, fear of xenophobia and strong sense of strangeness, foreignness and alienation. The speakers reconstruct a possible story of the past which takes over the plot and turns the Israeli violinist’s home environment into a scene of tragic events.

Please take into account that the scripts are for private use only. Contact the writer about the rights whenever you wish to use a text for a performance.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.

Corona Care Package #47 | The COVID-19 Generation

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Tuesday’s post: How different generations are responding to COVID-19
Monday’s post: The corona app: solution to our problems or a big mistake?

Tuesday 2 June | The COVID-19 Generation

Will this be the defining moment for Generation Z?

Studying and graduating during a recession, let alone a global health crisis, will be challenging. Job vacancies are drying up, scholarships are being canceled, and you won’t even get to celebrate properly. But each generation faces its own challenges. In this article on verywellmind.com, Kendra Cherry sketches what each generation is dealing with in terms of COVID-19.

Brooke Masters at the Financial Times warns that lessons from past crises show that the younger generations suffer the most. It may take a decade for Generation Z to catch up in wealth and opportunity. And who knows what the long term effects will be for children? Even as we try to return to some form of normal life, it may do well to remember that we ourselves have been changed. Whether this moment defines us or not, time will tell.

Studium Generale created a Corona Care Package to make #StayingIn as pleasant as possible. In the following weeks we will share videos, blogs, articles and podcasts within four focus areas: Mental Health, The World After Corona, Arts & Culture and other online events.