Culture is the beliefs and practices of a people, and literature is one of the richest repositories of these beliefs. In this reading group we will read canonical texts that greatly influenced English literature, and as we read, we will encounter dominant cultural values that still hold sway today. The importance of free will, the individual in society, the role of gods and fate, the nature of virtue, and the conventions of love and gender are just some of the ideas we will explore. We will read works ranging from Ovid in the 1st century BCE to Chaucer in the 14th century CE–literature that greatly influenced English writers, and literature that was considered the earliest kind of English literature. Before 1500, works that influenced English literature were written in Latin, Italian, or French; moreover, early “English” literature is written in a version of English that native speakers now no longer understand! Therefore, the readings are all in modern English translations. Web links, PDFs, and library links will be provided to enable members to gain affordable and easy access to these texts.
News
My Dialogue with CBC
My Dialogue with CBC
By Yang Wang
December 31, 2020
Recently, I had several emails with the CBC, exchanging our opinions on a piece of news aired on their radio. I’d like to share with friends the key parts of the correspondences which are pretty self-explanatory as follows. Thanks to my friends for helping me find the contact information, and for their feedback during our chats!
EAWLC Zoom Dialogue on Future Jobs and Education: the Trends and How to Get Prepared
Our final public event in 2020 will be a dialogue about future!
The dialogue between a professional human resource development strategist and an engineer father of three, that will bring along their vision for tomorrow’s job market, how jobs would be created, who would be the most valued workers, the trends in education, and how we can prepare ourselves and/or our kids today for success tomorrow!
Notes from the EAWLC Personal Communications Training for Members
Notes from the EAWLC Personal Communications Training for Members
Notes from the Personal Communications Workshop
For The East and West Learning Club on 21 November, 2020
Practical, Helpful, and Useable Skills
We’re here for about something really important. Something that, if you pay
attention, will make a positive difference to how things work for you. I
learned this through experience and it changed the way I approach
everything. Continue reading “Notes from the EAWLC Personal Communications Training for Members”
EAWLC Personal Communications Training for Members – Practical, Helpful, and Useable
The East and West Learning Club is offering this personal communication skills training to its members as promised. Please check Membership page to see how to become a member, and you are welcome to participate if your membership application is accepted before the workshop begins
All members will receive an email invitation to register for the online workshop via Zoom.
Time: Saturday November 21, 2020 at 8:00 – 9:30 P.M. Eastern Time
Cost: Free, and for members only
EAWLC Zoom Learning for Curious People: The Fitness Remedy
Shaoxuan Zhou (Joe), a professional architect and urban designer, came to our club in July of this year, giving a wonderful lecture on the appreciation of architectural designs. Other than an architect, ‘Coach Joe’ is also a known nickname among his friends: they often go to Joe for fitness advice, some finding it life-changing. It all started from a casual enrollment in a community gym in Beijing in 2005. At the time Joe had been bothered by stomach ulcer and insomnia for years. He even stopped his indie architecture design practice, spending most of the time on all kinds of sports in a hope to get his health back on the track, but had progressed very little. To his great surprise, Joe saw remarkable improvement in all of his symptoms within one month after he started the workout, and felt like overhauled after three months. Ever since then, Joe’s fascination with fitness training has driven him to educate himself on kinesiology, and become an personal trainer for himself, families and friends, in addition to a happy, healthy and successful architect again. Exercises, if done in a right way, is bound to bring life-changing benefits to your health, according to Joe, as he has witnessed himself!
Continue reading “EAWLC Zoom Learning for Curious People: The Fitness Remedy”
EAWLC Zoom Learning for curious People: Let’s Talk about Money
Ivy Tan is a successful financial advisor. Her excellent number sense came
to light when she worked at OTIS China as its CFO’s secretary, then an
English Literature major just graduated from university. She decided to
sharpen that talent so she went to the United Kingdom, and obtained her
Bachelor’s degree in Accounting and a Master’s in Finance from Oxford
Brookes University. She became a capital manager, in charge of a cash flow
of 36 billion volume in RMB (around 4.5 billion in USD) for a Chinese
company. In 2012, Ivy immigrated to Canada with her family, and started a
new career. She founded Phoenix Finance, a Toronto-based life insurance and
investment agency. She is a MDRT (Million Dollar Round Table) member, and
her company has been one of the top agents of Canada Life since 2017
nationwide. Ivy loves reading in her spare time, and has a passion for
doing research in the fields of finance and economics.
Continue reading “EAWLC Zoom Learning for curious People: Let’s Talk about Money”
Let’s Build the Bridge / 架桥
Let’s Build the Bridge
By Yang Wang
September 30, 2020
EAWLC Poetry Series: Decoding ‘Second Farewell to Cambridge’
Near the River Cam in Cambridge, King’s College set up a memorial garden for
Xu Zhimo, a pioneer of modern Chinese poetry who studied at King’s College in 1921-22. At the entrance to the garden, stands a white granite stone carved with the beginning and last lines of Xu’s most famous poem ‘Second Farewell to Cambridge’. Xu wrote the poem in 1928 after re-visiting the university. Three years later he died in an airplane crash at the age of 35. Xu was one of the prominent intellectuals who pushed forward the New Culture Movement in China around 1920’s. He wrote and promoted free verse poems and essays in vernacular Chinese, and was the first to introduce poetry works of western romantics to China. His marriages and love affairs with three renowned women controversially illustrates his life time goal of pursuing love, freedom and beauty. Under all this glamour, Xu is a learned scholar deeply influenced by both eastern and western cultures. Before he went to study at the University of Cambridge, he learned Laws at Peking University, graduated with a Bachelor’s degree from Clark University, Massachusetts, majoring in Political and Social Sciences with a minor in History, and did graduate studies in Economics and Politics at Columbia University. In 1925, Xu travelled to Moscow to observe the newly
established Soviet Union. He left with vivid accounts of his observations
and insightful reflections, many of his forecasts only to be Proven later by
the history. [1]-[3] Continue reading “EAWLC Poetry Series: Decoding ‘Second Farewell to Cambridge’”
EAWLC Poetry Series: The Introduction and Appreciation of Shih-Ching, the Classic of Poetry
About the Lecturer
George Liang loves literature, history, and philosophy. He reads and travels a lot, and enjoys writing traditional Chinese poems. He has given series of lectures on the Shih-Ching in his spare time. His profession is in the financial sector. A CPA and CGA since 2006, George has worked as an investment representative at RBC, a senior financial analyst at CIBC, the CFO at Bombay/Bowring, and currently a financial advisor at Edward Jones.