A Walk Across Afghanistan. A Talk about Iraq with Rory Stewart
Hart House Library (7 Hart House Circle)
Join us for an extraordinary evening with author Rory Stewart as he takes us along on his journey through Iraq.
In August 2003, at the age of thirty, Rory Stewart took a taxi from Jordan to Baghdad. A Farsi-speaking British diplomat, he was soon appointed deputy governor of Amarah and then Nasiriyah, provinces in the remote, impoverished marsh regions of southern Iraq. He spent the next eleven months negotiating hostage releases, holding elections, and splicing together some semblance of an infrastructure for a population of millions teetering on the brink of civil war.
The Prince of the Marshes tells the story of Stewart’s year. As a participant he takes us inside the occupation and beyond the Green Zone, introducing us to a colorful cast of Iraqis and revealing the complexity and fragility of a society we struggle to understand. By turns funny and harrowing, moving and incisive, it amounts to a unique portrait of heroism and the tragedy that intervention inevitably courts in the modern age.
In January 2002 Rory Stewart walked across Afghanistan—surviving by his wits, his knowledge of Persian dialects and Muslim customs, and the kindness of strangers. By day he passed through mountains covered in nine feet of snow, hamlets burned and emptied by the Taliban, and communities thriving amid the remains of medieval civilizations. By night he slept on villagers’ floors, shared their meals, and listened to their stories of the recent and ancient past. Along the way Stewart met heroes and rogues, tribal elders and teenage soldiers, Taliban commanders and foreign-aid workers. He was also adopted by an unexpected companion—a retired fighting mastiff he named Babur in honor of Afghanistan’s first Mughal emperor, in whose footsteps the pair was following. His story is told in the book The Places in Between.
Through these encounters—by turns touching, confounding, surprising, and funny—Stewart makes tangible the forces of tradition, ideology, and allegiance that shape life in the map’s countless places in between.
Rory Stewart has written for the New York Times Magazine, Granta, and the London Review of Books, and is the author of The Prince of the Marshes. A former fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire by the British government for services in Iraq. He lives in Scotland.
Grand Design: An Evening of Discussion with Mark Kingwell and Lisa Rochon. Moderated by Professor Larry Richards
Wednesday, November 8, 2006. 7pm FREE
Hart House, East Common Room (7 Hart House Circle)
University of Toronto Bookstore
READING SERIES
In partnership
with
Hart House
GRAND DESIGN
presents
IN CONVERSATION WITH MARK KINGWELL & LISA ROCHON,
moderated by Professor Larry Richards
The Reading Series and Grand Designs explores how space design, human behaviour and culture interact and foster new relationships between people and their environments, and welcome you to celebrate the current architectural renaissance in Toronto, with our evening of discussion.
Join Mark Kingwell, author of Nearest thing to Heaven: The Empire State Building and American Dreams, and architecture critic for The Globe and Mail and author of Up North: Where Canada’s Architecture Meets the Land,Lisa Rochon, with moderator U of T Professor Larry Richards, from the U of T Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design, will discuss…
Have we become the architects of our own space?
How do cultures and communities stake claim on particular spaces and design?
How does space foster or inhibit community building?
What does nature reveal about principles of sustainable design?
Do Men Mother? by Andrea Doucet
Hart House Library (7 Hart House Circle)
![]()
Andrea Doucet joins us for an evening of discussion. More and more, fathers are deciding to stay at home and care for their children rather than work full-time outside of the home. More and more, Canadian families are lead by single fathers. Shining a spotlight on the lives of stay at home dads and single fathers, Do Men Mother? provides groundbreaking evidence of dramatic changes in mothering and fathering in Canada.
Using evidence gathered in a four-year in-depth qualitative study, including interviews with over 100 fathers – from truck drivers to insurance salesmen, physicians to artists – Andrea Doucet illustrates how men are breaking the mold of traditional parenting models. Doucet’s research examines key questions such as: What leads fathers to trade earning for caring? How do fathers navigate through the ‘maternal worlds’ of mothers and infants? Are men mothering or are they redefining fatherhood?
Do Men Mother? illuminates fathers’ candid reflections on caring and the intricate social worlds that men and women inhabit as they ‘love and let go’ of their children. In asking and unravelling the question ‘do men mother,’ this study tells a compelling story about Canadian parents radically re-visioning child care and domestic responsibilities at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Andrea Doucet is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton University.
Pandemonium is Here: Are We Ready?
Tuesday, November 14, 2006 7:30pm FREE
Hart House, Library (7 Hart House Circle)
![]()
The Reading Series welcomes Andrew Nikiforuk, journalist and author of Pandemonium:Bird Flu, Mad Cow Disease, and Other Biological Plagues of the 21st Century, as well as Dr. Vincent Lam, author of Scotiabank Giller Prize Winner 2006,Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures, and co-author of The Flu Pandemic and You: Canadian Guide, with Dr. Colin Lee, to an evening of discussion about the viruses that are plaguing civilization and offers up a survival guide – both to pandemic influenza, and to the hype surrounding it.
Dr. Vincent Lam was born in London, Ontario, and grew up in Ottawa. His family is from the expatriate Chinese community of Vietnam. Dr. Lam did his medical training in Toronto, and is an emergency physician who also does international air evacuation work and expedition medicine on Arctic and Antarctic ships. His non-fiction has appeared in The Globe and Mail, the National Post, and The University of Toronto Medical Journal. His fiction has been published in Carve. Vincent’s website is www.vincentlam.ca.
Dr. Colin Lee is a public health physician and an emergency physician. He serves on a number of infectious disease control committees at the hospital, community, and provincial levels in Ontario. His work also extends globally to developing countries.
Andrew Nikiforuk’s work as a journalist – for such magazines as Saturday Night, Maclean’s, Canadian Business, Report on Business Magazine, Georgia Straight, and Equinox – has earned him four National Magazine Awards, the Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy, and top honors from the Association of Canadian Journalists. His best-selling book School’s Out: The Catastrophe in Public Education and What Parents Can Do About It was shortlisted for the Gordon Montador Award for writing on issues of key social interest.
