17 Oct 2019

Fall 2019


The Greek Gods in the 21st Century



Dr. Michael Griffin
UBC Classics, Near East and Religious Studies

Monday 28 October 2019 at 7:30 pm
Upper Hall, Hellenic Community Centre
4500 Arbutus Street, Vancouver, Canada

Are the Greek gods thriving in the 21st century? In this talk, we'll explore the enduring appeal of figures like Zeus, Athena, Artemis, and Apollo in modern story, art, and ideas. Setting out from fiction, film, and games, we'll also investigate the legacy of the Greek gods in our philosophy, psychology, and science, and the value—and challenge—posed by the vision that Homer and Hesiod sang into being more than 2,500 years ago.
Now it is time for the gods to step out of inhabited things…
And to knock over every wall in my house...
A brand-new field of air. —Rilke


Now it is time for the gods to step out of inhabited things…
And to knock over every wall in my house...
A brand-new field of air. —Rilke





Edward Lear’s Greece




Richard Spratley,
President Pharos

Monday 25 November, 2019 at 7:30 pm
Upper Hall, Hellenic Community Centre
4500 Arbutus Street, Vancouver


English author, poet, botanist and landscape painter Edward Lear (1812-1888) is best known today for his nonsense rhymes and limericks.  However, in the mid-nineteenth century he travelled widely in Greece, Italy and the Middle East and his travel writings and sketches offer a fascinating insight into life in these areas.  We will follow Lear’s travels in Northern Greece – then part of the Ottoman Empire – and share with him the trials of an eccentric English Gentleman in  a very wild and uncivilized landscape.