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Ideas that can change everything March 2017

2017 Festival Schedule

March 6

TSou-ke solar: Indigenous leadership in building a more the leading edge of inquiry into new curriculum practices,
mental health for youth, the challenges of leadership and new
sustainable future ways of deeply engaging young learners. Then take a guided
11:30 A.M.1:30 P.M. | CLEARIHUE BUILDING (CLE) 302 lab tour: find out how the human brain responds to stimuli,
Recently named Canadas first Aboriginal solar community, why we measure physical performance or how we improve
TSou-ke Nation has become a world-renowned leader in rehabilitation effortsand the ways the results are translated
sustainability. Join community research partners from TSou- into healthy personal practices.
ke Nation, the Victoria Native Friendship Centre and UVic as
they share stories of innovation in Indigenous economies
and resurgence, sustainability and land-based governance. A UVics mini med school: Preventative medicine and
mixture of storytelling, artifacts and visual media will spur a navigating the health care system
richer understanding of how Indigenous leadership is shaping a 46 P.M. | MEDICAL SCIENCES BUILDING (MSB) 150
brighter and more sustainable future. From the outside, the world of medicine looks both exciting
and complicated, with state-of-the-art drugs and technologies
Whither plastic? Nurdles and plastics on Victoria beaches that allow doctors to perform near-miraculous cures. In reality,
23:30 P.M. | MCPHERSON LIBRARY (LIB) 129 however, medicine is still unable to do many things, and
Pollution from plastics is a growing problem in marine prevention is still the best option. This presentation will explore
environments worldwide. Plastics dont readily break down, the science of staying healthy and how our medical system
theyre known to soak up contaminants, and marine animals really works. Students will also share preliminary data from a
sometimes mistake them as food, causing plastics to move research project that assessed the impact of health education
up the food chain. This session will examine nurdles (kernels on public health literacy.
or pellets used to make plastics) and plastic debris fouling the
beaches of Victoria, and will wrestle with the question: How can The contemplative mind: Mindfulness in higher
we wean ourselves from plastics? education
4:306 P.M. | UVICS INTERFAITH CHAPEL
Triple-play research caf: Exploring the vital impacts of Scientifically-based research has shown the benefits of
educational research contemplative practice in reducing stress, improving focus,
46 P.M. | MCKINNON BUILDING (MCK) 179 AND enhancing creativity, promoting empathy and compassion, and
improving both psychological and physical health. Integrating
LOBBY AREAS
Spirituality, a program of UVics Multifaith Services (MFS), offers
Join us for an event that will challenge your assumptions
mindfulness meditation as an experiential tool to facilitate
about educational research! Hear faculty members speak on
learning. Students, faculty and staff have experienced deeper
diverse topics including the beauty of science education, the
insights and improved quality of teaching, learning and health.
ways technology is re-making the world of learning and how
Join us as faculty members and MFS chaplains share successes
museums can be used to challenge and invigorate public
achieved through classroom presentations.
debate. Have a chat with our graduate students who are on

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 6 contd.

Angry populism: Understanding the new politics of Visual storytelling: A glimpse into world-changing
anxiety and xenophobia research
79 P.M. | ENGINEERING/COMPUTER SCIENCE BUILDING 78:30 P.M. | BOB WRIGHT CENTRE (BWC) A104
(ECS) RM 123 Close to home and around the globe, social sciences researchers
Across the world theres a renewal of angry populism, where tackle challenges and find solutions that make our world a
large numbers of people are feeling abandoned by their better place. Using visual storytelling techniques, researchers
political and economic leaders and turning to demagogues from the Faculty of Social Sciences will take you around the
and xenophobia. What accounts for this return to the worst globe with their short photo stories about community-engaged
of our past? UVic scholars offer historical perspectives on the research. Victoria city councillor and spoken-word poet Jeremy
contemporary surge of support for Trumpism, Brexit and anti- Loveday hosts the evening, introducing you to community-
immigration parties in Europe, looking at historical precedent engaged researchers from anthropology, economics,
and highlighting the sources of reactionary populisms environmental studies, geography, political science, psychology
contempt for the political establishment. and sociology.

March 7

Roses are red, violets are blue: An introduction to the our world will be showcased one night only on campus.
Join us. Grab some free popcorn. Prepare to be amazed and
science of colour inspired!
2:303:30 P.M. | DAVID TURPIN BUILDING (DTB) A102
Why is the sky blue? Why is grass green? Why is blood red?
Were all drawn to colour and become curious about it at a On being here to stay, together
young age. This public talk will provide an introduction to the 5:307:30 P.M. | BOB WRIGHT CENTRE (BWC) B150
science behind colour in terms of what it is, how we perceive Reconciling a regrettable colonial past with a respectful future
it and what materials produce it. Anecdotes from throughout is a challenge and an opportunity for governments and peoples
history, as well as modern uses, including alternative energy and around the world. As we celebrate Canadas 150th, how do we
health, will be used to illustrate how pervasive colour has been, reconcile the past and participate in an inclusive and diverse
and continues to be, in our world. future? Join us for a conversation on the impact of universal
aspirations for the rights of Indigenous peoples and of national
Rethinking the creative economy calls for reconciliation. What can we do as individuals and within
our communities to support these goals?
46 P.M. | DAVID TURPIN BUILDING (DTB) A110
When it comes to the creative economy, myths often trump
facts. While some believe the arts have no significant financial Reconciliation and resurgence: How Indigenous artists
impact, the cultural sector boasts 700,000-plus jobs and are re-imagining the story of Canada
contributes more than $60 billion annually to the Canadian 79 P.M. | ALIX GOOLDEN HALL, 907 PANDORA AVE
economy10 times more than sports, and thats not even Join university chancellor and celebrated broadcast journalist
factoring in the value of art. This lively panel discussion will blow Shelagh Rogers for an intimate conversation with Indigenous
the lid off outdated arts myths, consider cultures lasting impact visual artists Rande Cook and Carey Newman and UVic visual
and explore our key investment: our students. anthropologist Andrea Walsh. Across Canada, contemporary
Indigenous artists are using images to explore place, truth
Research Reels and identity and challenging us to transform our perspectives,
56:30 P.M. | MACLAURIN BUILDING (MAC) A144 conversations and ideas. Collectively, this great imagining is
Get a taste of the outstanding research and creative activity playing a unique and pivotal role in understanding our past and
taking place at UVic, as told by our talented students, faculty, determining our shared future.
staff and alumni. A juried collection of short videos highlighting
UVic research and how its having an impact on our lives and Free admission, registration required: uvic.ca/ideafest/register

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 8

Jamie Cassels Undergraduate Research Awards (JCURA) Research + Community: Provosts Engaged Scholar
Fair Award
11:30 A.M.3 P.M. | STUDENT UNION BUILDING (SUB) 4:306:30 P.M. | UNIVERSITY CLUB (UCL) SALAL ROOM
MICHELE PUJOL ROOM AND UPPER LOUNGE Curious about the impact that UVic research has on our
Connect with the next generation of Canadian researchers! local communities? Discover and celebrate the integration
UVics Jamie Cassels Undergraduate Research Awards (JCURA) of outstanding UVic scholarship and real-life community
offer exceptional undergraduate students the opportunity to engagement at the 2017 Provosts Engaged Scholar Awards.
carry out research in their field of study. The JCURA Research Fair Last years award winners, Jessica Ball and John Lutz, and the
will feature over 100 of these inspiring projects, ranging from 2017 winners will each share their personal experiences in
the latest in robotics to literary analyses of the human condition. community-engaged research. The celebration will include a
presentation of the 2017 awards by the Vice-President Academic
Popular poplars and primeval pines: Centre for Forest and Provost.
Biology greenhouse tour
121:30 P.M. | UVICS GLOVER GREENHOUSE Why art matters in dangerous times
Take a guided tour through the Centre for Forest Biologys 57 P.M. | MCPHERSON LIBRARY (LIB) 025
Glover Greenhouse and discover the latest in UVics tree and This lively panel argues that at a time when xenophobia,
forest biology research, from tree genomes and genetics, to ethnocentrism, political tensions, and censorship are on the rise,
forest pathogens, seedling resiliency and plant adaptation. art and the visualfrom the meme to the masterpiecehave
Led by centre experts in plant biology, this guided tour will more to offer society than ever before in human history. This
also include a look at the greenhouse collection of unusual panel event accompanies the exhibition Learning through
specimens, including carnivorous plants and ancient looking: Celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Department of
gymnosperms. Art History & Visual Studies.

Living research: Stories from the field Art and children, children and art
2:304:30 P.M. | DAVID STRONG BUILDING (DSB) C118 79 P.M. | CORNETT BUILDING (COR) A221
Discover how UVic is connected to the world through student- Childrens art can be seen as a prism, making the psychological
led research in partnership with migrant and refugee rights lives of children visible, and telling us about societal
organizations in India, Bangladesh, Singapore, South Africa and conceptions of art and the link between childhood and the
Malaysia. Students will share experiences from diverse projects visual world. In turn, when children are depicted in art, there are
including: a phone app to learn Bangla, a cookbook-storybook inherent messages about the places they inhabit. Join scholars
from India, a digital resource library, a curriculum development from across campus in this lively and multidisciplinary event
project for refugee youth, and a digital collage showcasing the that will include new research, debate and art. The audience is
lives of rickshaw wallahs. Come and learn about the power of invited to bring childrens works of art.
community-based research and what happens when students
get out of the classroom and into the field. Brave spirits on new paths: The road to Indigenous
economic reconciliation
Re-presenting the living landscape: The common ground 79 P.M. | ALIX GOOLDEN HALL, 907 PANDORA AVE
community mapping fair What are the bold steps for all Canadians towards Indigenous
36 P.M. | DAVID TURPIN BUILDING (DTB) B211/215 economic reconciliation? In this session, UVic professors John
How does mapping Indigenous place names relate to eco- Borrows and Brent Mainprize will offer insight from their
cultural restoration and contribute to gathering stories about research into this subject, before Ovide Mercredi (past National
place? Join us for a celebration and showcase of local and Chief, Assembly of First Nations), Guujaaw (former Haida leader),
global community mapping, place-making and story gathering, and David Suzuki (renowned author and environmentalist) share
supported by the UVic Community Mapping Collaboratory. their personal perspectives and expertise in a stimulating panel
Hear from neighbourhood and campus mappers, students, discussion. From sustainable development to the legal and
researchers and activists. Play a community mapping game and political framework of Indigenous economic reconciliation, the
share your story on the UVic and CRD Community Green Map event will explore topics relevant to all Canadians. A moderated
community platforms. Q&A with the audience will follow the presentation.

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 8 contd.

Ecology of a changing coast here. And for millennia First Nations have flourished alongside
79 P.M. | MACLAURIN BUILDING (MAC) A144, DAVID LAM them. Yet today, the effects of climate change, overharvesting
AUDITORIUM and development are impacting this fine balance. Three
The BC coastal regionfrom the Salish Sea to the Great Bear researchers at the forefront of their fields discuss their research
Rainforest and the Haida Gwaii archipelagois home to some on the changing ecology of the BC coast and their efforts to
of the richest biodiversity on Earth. Fish, bears, wolves, whales, minimize these threats, working with local communities and
migratory birds and botanical species, among others, flourish government.

March 9

Arts and media in the Hispanic and Italian world Join the Department of Computer Science for a technology
9:30 A.M.3:30 P.M. | UNIVERSITY CENTRE A180 showcase and Pecha Kucha event, and discover some of the
Join the Department of Hispanic and Italian Studies for its 32nd latest in UVic CPS innovation, from smart gyms to autonomous
annual colloquium. This years event explores arts and media in flying vehicles.
the Hispanic and Italian world and includes presentations on
recent research by faculty members and students, a keynote Bridges to knowing: The value and place of languages in
lecture (in English) by Alvaro Vzquez Mantecn, (Universidad
Autnoma Metropolitana, Mexico City) on the representations
the humanities
2:304 P.M. | STUDENT UNION BUILDING (SUB) MICHELE
of politics in recent Mexican art and a screening of the
PUJOL ROOM
documentary Picassos Guernica. This screening will be followed
Join the Faculty of Humanities for a celebration of languages.
by a discussion on the links between arts and politics. A link to
Take part in a round-table discussion on advanced research in
the full schedule is on the Ideafest website.
non-English languagesfrom investigating Spanish explorer
shipping logs, to studying the ways in which Japanese
Cleaning and monitoring Earth animation critiques contemporary society. Hands-on activities
121 P.M. | GREATER VICTORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY, CENTRAL will include Five Languages in Five Minutes, where you can
BRANCH, COMMUNITY MEETING ROOM learn three useful phrases in five languages in five minutes or
Nanotechnologythe study and application of extremely less, and Writing Right where you can learn to write your name
small thingsis one of the new frontiers of discovery in science in Japanese, Cyrillic and Chinese. Come and explore research in
and engineering. This lecture will describe the potential global the languages of the world and find out how language ability is
impact of newly created nanotechnology that cleans 100 per so vital to humanities scholarship.
cent of contaminants from wastewater, as well as three new
imaging methods being developed at UVic to monitor Earths
atmosphere, ocean and landmass. All of these technologies 2017 UVic Author Celebration
have exciting commercialization possibilities! 34:30 P.M. | UVIC BOOKSTORE
Each year UVic faculty, staff, students and alumni produce an
incredible amount of intellectual content reflecting a wide
The rise of smart cyber-physical systems range of research, teaching, personal and professional interests.
13 P.M. | ENGINEERING/COMPUTER SCIENCE BUILDING Come and celebrate the universitys talented community of
(ECS) 660 authors with the UVic Bookstore and UVic Libraries at this
Talking to gadgets is no longer a Star Trek fantasy. Cyber-physical fantastic annual event.
systems (CPS) and the Internet of Things are transforming the
way we interact and communicate with the physical world.
Digital assistantssuch as Siri, Cortana, Alexa and Googleare
integrating data into our lives and helping us execute many of
our daily tasks with greater reliability and predictability than ever
before.

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 9 contd.

Leading with their hearts and heads: Using business Sound and the sea
skills in Swaziland and Nepal 78:30 P.M. | HARRY HICKMAN BUILDING (HHB) 105
4:306 P.M. | DAVID STRONG BUILDING (DSB) C125 What are the sounds of the sea? From the haunting songs
As voluntourism takes off and westerners spend their holidays of marine mammals to the ear-piercing noises of shipping
and savings on aid projects, some question the validity of traffic and sonar, the ocean is a 24-hour orchestra. Join Ocean
these projects and the people running them. Meet business Networks Canada, UVic researchers, and Cowichan knowledge
professors who have worked on projects in Swaziland and holders to learn about recent research on the marine
Nepal and be inspired by their on-the-ground stories. Discover soundscape, the cultural importance of sound in place-based
how these projects and others fit within the United Nations knowledge, and how bioacoustics are being incorporated into
Sustainable Development Goals. the classroom, as we explore a noisy world beneath the waves.

West coast eco-spirituality: Religion, reverence and Three Minute Thesis (3MT) Competition Finals
reason in Cascadia 78:30 P.M. | MACLAURIN BUILDING (MAC) A144, DAVID
4:306 P.M. | ENGINEERING/COMPUTER SCIENCE BUILDING LAM AUDITORIUM
(ECS) RM 123 An 80,000-word thesis would take nine hours for a grad student
Nearly fifty per cent of British Columbians report they have to present. The time limit in this fast-paced competitionthree
no religionthats more than twice the share of nones than minutes. The Three Minute Thesis is an exciting competition
any other region in Canada and higher than anywhere else in that challenges graduate students to describe their research
North America. The religious and spiritual style of the Cascadia in a clear, engaging and jargon-free presentation using just
bio-region is influenced by its distinctive history, politics and one slidein 180 seconds. Masters and PhD students from
environment, and is expressed through such activities as hiking, across campus will participate in the final round of the UVic
yoga, mindfulness practices, religious creativity and a reverence competition in front of a panel of esteemed judges.
for nature. Join local scholars, practitioners and critics of west
coast eco-spirituality to debate, debunk and discover the roots
and implications of this unique phenomenon.

The write stuff: Meet the future of Can Lit


78 P.M. | COPPER OWL BAR, VENUE AND LOUNGE, 1900
DOUGLAS ST
Meet the next generation of Canadian literature as masters in
fine arts students from UVics legendary Department of Writing
read (and perform) ground-breaking graduating manuscripts
in fiction, poetry, screenwriting and playwriting and creative
nonfiction at this lively (and licensed) literary cabaret.

Doors at 6:30: Free admission, no minors.

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 10

Old school lessons: Indigenous ways of teaching and issueit involves social justice, morality, the impacts of gender,
age and religion, and personal well-being. Come and listen
learning to a moderated panel discussion between humanists as they
10:30 A.M.12 P.M. | FIRST PEOPLES HOUSE (FPH)
unravel some of the complexities of global migration, including
CEREMONIAL HALL
forced migration, and explain how their research and teaching
Join us at this interactive session where well describe the ways
responds to it.
in which weve learned from elders, community members
and from our teacher who has integrated Aboriginal ways of
knowing and being into our work. Weve been working and From quarks to quasars: Your universe, one discovery at
learning at the Craigflower School House in a multi-aged a time
context where we interact, cooperate and learn from each 79 P.M. | BOB WRIGHT CENTRE (BWC) LOBBY
other in this beautiful setting, recently designated a National Is Pluto a planet? Can you really make a particle accelerator out
Historic Site. Whether youre a parent, a teacher, an educator, or of Lego? What does it feel like to dive into a galaxy? Celebrate
an interested member of the public, we hope to inspire you to an evening of discovery at the Department of Physics and
build together a shared future of respectful relationships. Astronomys mini-festival of fundamental science. Watch a
rapid round of student thesis talks (each just 360 seconds, to be
Engaging in stories of Indigenous well-being judged by you, the audience!), take part in a series of micro-labs
13 P.M. | FIRST PEOPLES HOUSE (FPH) CEREMONIAL HALL demonstrating some of the most famous experiments in the
Indigenous-led research and Indigenous methodologies history of science, and tour state-of-the-art facilities including
demonstrate a holistic nature that vastly differs from western one of the worlds most powerful microscope and UVics
concepts of research. In this Pecha Kucha-style presentation, exceptional campus telescopes.
UVic public health researcher Charlotte Loppie will briefly
explain some key components of Indigenous research Re-imagining race, art and landscape
methods before turning the stage over to students, researchers 79 P.M. | LEGACY ART GALLERY DOWNTOWN, 630 YATES ST
and affiliates of UVics Centre for Indigenous Research and How do artists of colour experience race and identity? Grafton
Community-Led Engagement (CIRCLE). Presenters will speak Tyler Brown was one of the first professional landscape artists
on the interdisciplinary frameworks they have undertaken to in BC, and the story of his racial identity shifted throughout
understand Indigenous well-being, from language revitalization his career to where he eventually passed for white. Three
to the importance of Indigenous networks within HIV/AIDS contemporary artists of colourCharles Campbell, Kemi Craig
interventions. and Victorias youth poet laureate Ann-Bernice Thomaswill
perform new work relating to racial identity in response to the
Migrating People UVic Legacy Gallery exhibition, The Mystery of Grafton Tyler
2:303:50 P.M. | DAVID TURPIN BUILDING (DTB) A120 Brown.
One of the most pressing issues the world currently faces is the
movement of people across borders. This isnt just a political

March 11

Medieval Minutes loaning UVic twenty-one 13th-century manuscripts this


11 A.M.12:30 P.M. | MCPHERSON LIBRARY (LIB) A005 spring. Come and discover these travelling treasures, under
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS the guidance of students and professors from UVics Medieval
Medieval Minutes invites you to centuries of writing, singing, Studies Program. Short presentations and posters included. Lets
decorating andsharing! The program Manuscripts in the experience the Middle Ages (and the later Ages), together!
Curriculum, organized by Les Enluminures Medieval Art, is
Everyone welcome. RSVP: events.medi@uvic.ca

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
March 11 contd.

Phoenix Theatre Human Library: Borrow a book, discover Archives in your attic
a person 12:30 P.M.2 P.M. | MCPHERSON LIBRARY (LIB) A003
10 A.M.4 P.M. | PHOENIX THEATRE (PNX) LOBBY | DROP-IN MEARNS CENTRE FOR LEARNING
EVENT Do you ever wonder whether those boxes of photos and
On Saturday March 11, 2017 please join us to celebrate the documents in your attic contain historically noteworthy
fiftieth anniversary of the University of Victorias Department of materials? Might these materials be of interest to future
Theatre in a very original way. Enter the lobby of the Phoenix researchers? Are there rare books in your study, and would you
Theatre, and discover the circulation desk where our volunteers like to learn more about them? Have you ever wondered if you
will register you with your own Human Library card and offer can preserve your digital photos and documents for future
to lend you one of a dozen possible human books. In choosing generations? Join UVic Libraries archivists and librarians for a
from titles like Actor, Playwright or Producer, youll sign one lively discussion about rare and unique books and archives and
out and be connected to the person behind that title. A one- their role in research, followed by an opportunity to discuss
on-one informal conversation will begin and the rest is up to specific items from your family collection, their condition and
you. Interact live with Phoenix pioneers, current educators and potential significance.
industry professionals. Whether you wish to connect with the
past, or make connections for the future, there will be a book for The Anthropocene is here! Living well in a One Planet
you.
region
1:304:30 P.M. | JAMES BAY NEW HORIZONS ACTIVITY
The Human Library is FREE and open to the public. Bookings
CENTRE, 234 MENZIES ST
can only be made same-day, and must be done in person in the
As we enter the Anthropocene, we face the challenge of living
Phoenix Theatre lobby. Books are on a rotating schedule and are
within the Earths limits. Currently, our ecological footprint
subject to availability, so please be aware that not every book
requires four planets-worth of bio-capacity. How do we reduce
will be available during all hours the Human Library is open.
our footprint to only one planet-worth, while ensuring a high
quality of life for all? In this roundtable discussion, community
Please arrive earlier than before you expect to read your book.
and university speakers will explore with the audience what
Books are checked out on a first come, first served basis starting
steps we can take in Greater Victoria to become a One Planet
at 9:30am, thirty minutes before the human library opens.
region.

Ongoing events

Provoking motion and making movement Sensitive chaos: The creation of flowing forms in water
MACLAURIN BUILDING (MAC) A-WING, A. WILFRID JOHNS and air
GALLERY VISUAL ARTS BUILDING (VIA) COURTYARD AND AUDAIN
Messages about how and why we should move our bodies GALLERY
are constantly present in modern Canadian lives (for example, Drawing 300 expands the concept of what it means to illustrate
the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology Guidelines and an idea, by curating an exhibition based on the book, Sensitive
Healthy Schools BC). What gets defined as movement? How is Chaos: The Creation of Flowing Forms in Water and Air by
movement lived? What does movement do? This arts-inspired Theodor Schwenk, 1965. The text is an exploration of fluid
movement studio was created through several collaborative dynamics in relation to our ability to read patterns revealed in
inquiries among young children and early childhood educators nature and art.
and is an invitation for participants of all ages to explore
possibilities with movement. Rather than declaring what All that life around us was really water, modeled according to
movement is, this studio-exhibit acts as a provocation to its own laws, vitalized by each fresh venture, striving to rise into
question, wonder, experiment and move together. consciousness. Excerpt from the foreword by Jacques Yves
Cousteau.
Exhibit launch: March 6th, 4:305:30 p.m.
Regular exhibit hours: March 6-11th, 9:30 a.m.6:30 p.m. Regular exhibit hours: March 6-18, 9 a.m.5 p.m.

www.uvic.ca/ideafest
Map of UVic

www.uvic.ca/ideafest

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