Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.02.2019, Blaðsíða 12
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12 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • February 15 2019
Julianna Roberts, Executive Director
New Iceland Heritage Museum
Gimli, MB
In August 2005, Mexican filmmaker and pilot
Francisco Gutiérrez took off in his ultralight
aircraft from Montreal to follow the monarch
butterflies on their 6,000 km migration from
Canada to the mountains of central Mexico, in
a bid to raise awareness of the importance of
preserving the butterflies’ habitat.
In collaboration with
the Embassy of Mexico,
the Canada Aviation
and Space Museum has
produced an exhibition
from the material
recorded by Gutiérrez on
his journey aboard the
Papalotzin, the nickname
of his ultralight aircraft,
which means “small
butterfly” in the Aztec
language. On the Trail of
the Monarch Butterfly will
be presented at the New
Iceland Heritage Museum
in Gimli, Manitoba,
starting on February 15
and continuing until May
1, 2019.
On the Trail of the Monarch Butterfly features
breathtaking photographs taken by Gutiérrez,
as well as the 60-minute movie documentary
Papalotzin – The Flight of the Monarch Butterfly.
A number of educational activities and crafts
are also available to help raise awareness to the
conservation issues facing Monarch butterflies.
The museum will be showing the movie
daily on the odd hours: 11:00, 1:00, and 3:00. On
weekends, it will be shown at 1:00 and 3:00.
K jarninn – “I sense great interest, and I have of course had
numerous bilateral meetings since I took over as minister;
this is important for hearing states’ emphases and policies
and currents first hand,” said Foreign Minister Guðlaugur Þór
Þórðarson on Kjarninn’s television program discussing Arctic
affairs. Guðlaugur said that the interests of the Chinese and
Russians in the issue area were known. In addition, however, there
is great interest throughout Asia.
The foreign minister said that he had emphasized drawing
attention to Arctic affairs in many parts of the world, including
Europe and bigger states in North America, the United States and
Canada. Most of the world’s nations are looking at the region and
following developments there. They are consequently looking to
Iceland because of its location.
Guðlaugur said that the most memorable meeting he had
regarding the matter was with a government minister from
Singapore. “They have two kinds of policy on this: on one hand,
to increase the elevation of the entire country 1½ metres. On the
other, they want to reap the benefits of the sailing routes that are
opening. That was the policy in a nutshell.” The minister said that
when a new sailing route opens, as is happening through the North,
it inevitably means increased opportunities for commerce.
“Most people, hopefully all people, approach this wanting
to see sustainability there, and wanting not to see things like
environmental accidents or pollution accidents or any such thing,
which is a threat to us that we must particularly consider. For
this to materialize, there must be agreement among states that
international law shall apply there, and that nothing happens in
this area that we do not want to see.”
Reprinted with permission from Icelandic News Briefs,
published by KOM PR.
“Human Ecology and Culture at Lake Mývatn, 1700-2000:
Dimensions of Environmental and Cultural Change,” is an
intensive graduate summer course being offered by Svartártkot
Culture – Nature (SCN) from August 16 to 26, 2019. This unique
course integrates environmental humanities and social sciences, and
it welcomes professors and scholars looking for new insights and
inspirations in post-disciplinary and trans-disciplinary methods.
Participants will visit the Mývatn Research Centre, enjoy
an archaeological tour of Hofstaðir, delve into local archives,
undertake hands-on field work, and hear lectures on a variety
of topics from Arctic farming to climate change and from
sustainability to legendary landscapes. Along the way, they’ll
learn about the 18th-century poet Látra-Björg (Björg Einarsdóttir),
Framengjar, historic outlaws, and elemental beings.
It’s hard to decide whether the most intriguing lecture title
is Viðar Hreinsson’s, “Big Farmers, ‘the first gay in the village,’
Bohemians and Leading Writers: Manuscripts and Literatures
of Mývatn, Stories and Poetry,” or Ragnhildur Sigurðardóttir’s,
“Bond Villains in the Context of Environmental History: How
Britain’s 007 Super Spy Saves the World.”
The course director is Viðar Hreinsson, Reykjavík Academy,
and other senior lecturers include: Árni Daníel Júlíusson,
University of Iceland; Megan Hicks, Hunter College, City
University of New York; Ragnhildur Sigurðardóttir, Reykjavík
Academy; and Astrid Ogilvie, Stefansson Arctic Institute.
The rural regions of Mývatn and Bárðardalur in Suður
Þingeyjarsýsla, North Iceland, are unique environments –
sometimes perceived as remote – but they are also entangled in
the wider social and environmental histories of Iceland and the
North Atlantic. Bárðardalur is a farming community in a deep
valley and the neighbouring Mývatn area is an elevated, inland
lakeside community with a rare biodiversity and a history of
rebellious social movements. The Mývatn community has been
at the centre of collaborative research by the interdisciplinary
scholars teaching and leading this course. Our research has
combined climate history, archaeology, ecology, literary history,
and economic history. In addition to contributing scholarship,
three of the instructors call these regions home. Our aim is that
the diverse lectures and activities included in this course will
spotlight the complex historical entanglement of society and the
environment, from the deep past into contemporary times. Our
further goal is to inspire students and professionals alike to draw
inspiration for their interdisciplinary scholarship whether their
work is focused on Iceland or elsewhere.
For further information, visit: svartarkot.is.
RUSSIA AND ASIA
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Svartárkot Culture-Nature offering an intensive graduate course at Barðárdalur
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Artwork by Slyencer
Sewing by SEAMS&BEYOND
PHOTO: SVARTÁRKOT CULTURE-NATURE
Þórólfshvoll by the river Kráká
A FASCINATING FLIGHT WITH
THE MONARCH BUTTERFLY
PHOTO: JIM COMBS / PIXABAY