管家婆免费开奖大全

Students pack 管家婆免费开奖大全's Hart House for discussion on democracy with Margaret Atwood

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Margaret Atwood appears on screen during a discussion titled 鈥淭he Story of Democracy: What鈥檚 Next?" with Randy Boyagoda (photo by Lisa Lightbourn)

Hundreds of 管家婆免费开奖大全 students lined up early to watch renowned author Margaret Atwood, an alumna of Victoria College, discuss the future of democracy with Randy Boyagoda, a writer and professor of English 鈥 and left with unexpected homework.

鈥淢y request to each of you is to spill out of this lecture hall tonight and engage with each other in collegial, respectful, meaningful conversation about your differences,鈥 Melanie Woodin, dean of the Faculty of Arts & Science, told the students in her opening remarks. 鈥淎nd don't stop there. Engage with your professors and your fellow students inside and outside of the classroom.鈥

Held at Hart House with overflow viewing at Convocation Hall, the discussion titled, 鈥淭he Story of Democracy: What鈥檚 Next?鈥 was moderated by Sam Tanenhaus, a  visiting fellow at the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy and former editor at the New York Times Book Review. The event attracted more than 500 students and was organized in response to the growing concern 鈥 at 管家婆免费开奖大全 and beyond 鈥 that democracy is at a critical point, struggling to survive.

Tanenhaus invited Atwood, who appeared virtually, to be first on the panel to comment. The author of The Handmaid鈥檚 Tale and The Testaments, among many other novels, is often quoted in international media on issues of citizenship, free speech and the importance of fiction writers in a democracy. At Hart House, she referenced current turmoil in the U.S., where active movements are attempting to limit who can 鈥 and cannot 鈥 vote, for example, as well as the media鈥檚 ability to report the news.

鈥淚t has been said that eternal vigilance is the price of freedom,鈥 Atwood said. 鈥淭he (political) right has kidnapped the idea of free speech and I think people have to kidnap it back.鈥

Melanie Woodin, dean of the Faculty of Arts & Science encouraged attendees to 鈥渆ngage with each other in collegial, respectful, meaningful conversation about your differences鈥 (photo by Lisa Lightbourn)

Upon being announced, the event immediately resonated with students, with all 300 Hart House tickets snatched up in just 19 minutes 鈥 and more registering for overflow viewing. Ultimately, it brought together students with different lived experiences and a range of political views, as Woodin pointed out in her introduction.

To Boyagoda, the key questions were: How do we all live together in one society? How do we debate 鈥 and disagree 鈥 in a productive, respectful way whether in the classroom, on campus or beyond?

For one, he suggested replacing the word 鈥渘o鈥 with 鈥減erhaps鈥 in a debate.

鈥淭he global village is the place where incompatible realities sit side by side on the bus,鈥 Boyagoda said, in part quoting from Salman Rushdie鈥檚 The Satanic Verses. 鈥淚n a global or globalized village, we often have incompatible realities side by side 鈥 in a classroom, in the Great Hall today,鈥 Boyagoda said. 鈥淲e all need to cultivate our version of 鈥榩erhaps,鈥 an openness to something that seems otherwise ridiculous, impossible, wrong. We need to cultivate our 鈥榩erhaps鈥 and it can be terrifying.

鈥淚n leaving today, I encourage all of you to consider: What's your 鈥榩erhaps?鈥 How do you find a way to keep that space open? Because if you don't keep it open, then everything else is closed off.鈥

The conversation moved from George Orwell鈥檚 1984 to Atwood鈥檚 The Handmaid鈥檚 Tale, touching on current protests in Iran, social upheaval in Sri Lanka and, in Canada, the Freedom Convoy protests that saw a heavier police presence at Queen鈥檚 Park and parts of 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 St. George campus.

The panelists also explored censorship 鈥 both the censorship of others and the self-censorship that stifles honest and mutually demanding discourse because people fear blowback from those who disagree.

Tanenhaus asked Atwood how often she self-censors. 鈥淲ell, I was badly brought up and I don't have a job, and that does influence what you feel you can say,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you don't have a job, nobody can fire you and this is why writers who don't have jobs are often called upon to speak in public.鈥

The event at Hart House resonated with students, with tickets snatched up in less than 20 minutes (photo by Lisa Lightbourn)

The event was aimed at: engaging students in robust discussions and advanced research; fostering timely debates that prize the importance of free speech; and educating and challenging future leaders as they journey through their university years and prepare to join democratic public life in Canada and around the world.

Some of the takeaways were deceptively simple for such a complex topic. For example: Continue to have conversations; disagree, but debate; and 鈥 as Atwood urged 鈥 remember that the Wizard of Oz was just a man behind a curtain.

鈥淲hat we have to watch out for is the deliberate creation of chaos because once you have chaos, everybody looks for a Mister Fix-it to, you know, help make the trains run on time,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think we're seeing that in various places in the world and I think we have to guard against it, even closer to home.鈥

Boyagoda pointed out that students attending the event have demonstrated their engagement in combatting erosion when it comes to democracy. Simply put, they showed up.

鈥淚n recent memory, I can't remember a time when the Faculty of Arts & Science had hundreds of students show up for an event,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think the primary interest, of course, is having a chance to hear Margaret's observations about the future of democracy, but you're also here because you're here with each other. Those are the little ways that you counteract the erosion of democracy.鈥

The conclusion? Ultimately, democracy is worth fighting for.

鈥淢any of you recognize that democracy can't be taken for granted 鈥 here at home, south of the border and all around the world,鈥 Woodin said. 鈥淚 believe the university and the Faculty of Arts & Science have a fundamental responsibility to support democratic engagement, which we're doing right here, right now.鈥

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