5 Jul 2003, Φ Birmingham & Oxford

1.-5.7.03 Birmingham & Oxford

2.7.03 Birmingham: Barber Institute (CL)

2.-3.7.03 Birmingham: Workshop “HIA evaluation”

3.-4.7.03 Oxford, incl

  • Ashmolean (CL: drawings, paintings)
  • Radcliffe Square
  • Carfax Tower
  • Christ Church College (Meadow building; Cloister; Dining Hall; Cathedral (incl. Shrine of St. Frideswide; Becket window); statue of Mercury; Library; Peckwater Quad; Picture Gallery. – Alice’s; Ruskin; Verfilmung der Geschichte vom kleinen Zauberlehrling
  • Covered Market

5.7.03 Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery


Excerpt from:

John Dougill (2002): Oxford. A literary guide. Oxface Publications, Oxford [erworben 4.7.2003]

pp.1-2 ‘That sweet city with her dreaming spires’ [History]:

  • Beginnings: By the early eleventh century, Oxford had become the biggest city outside London… The Prologue of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (c. 1387) includes a Clerke of Oxenforde …
  • The English Athens: The medieval university was religious in essence … With the Elizabethan renaissance, writers celebrated the well-being of the country in expansive terms… Dan Rogers declared that, ‘lf God Himself on earth abode would make / He Oxford, sure, would for his dwelling take’ …
  • Reason to reform: From the late seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century, the English Athens’ sat back on its laurels. The university became insular, elitist … it was only with the reforms of the 1850s and 1870s, forced on the university by parliament, that Oxford emerged from the Middle Ages.
  • The Oxford Novel and the Oxford Myth: Since 1823, over 550 novels have been set or partly set in Oxford … Most are by former students, idealising their student days. Pre-reform Oxford … there had developed a cult Oxford, which championed the city as a citadel of truth and beauty… 1865 … Oxford’s annus mirabilis … Lewis Carroll wrote of a ‘dream-child’ in the transmogrified Oxford of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Oxford became a golden city of the imagination …
  • Modern Oxford: … the city has continued to attract writers, and the fictional worlds of academic figures such as J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S.Lewis … captivated the wider world…

pp.3 ff Colleges etc.

  • All Souls College (1438): T.E. Lawrence (1888-1933), Lawrence of Arabia
  • Balliol College (1263): Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) … Graham Greene (1904-91)
  • Broad Street: The Oxford Martyrs
  • Christ Church (1546): Charles Dodgson (“Lewis Carroll”) (1832-98), Christ Church mathematician(Alice: Alice Liddell); John Ruskin (1819-1900), influential art critic
  • Exeter College (1314): William Morris (1834-96)
  • Holywell Cemetery, Graves: Kenneth Grahame (1859-1932) (Wind in the willows); Theophilius carter, the original “Mad Hatter”
  • Magdalen College (1458): Oscar Wilde (1854-1900); C.S.Lewis (1898-1963), convert, “Christian apologist”, 1950: “The lion, the witch, and the wardrobe”; The Inklings … From 1931 a group of writers met Thursday evenings in Lewis’ rooms … It was here that Tolkien first read out The Hobbit (1937) … They shared a love of walks, word games and riddles. … Out of their Beowulf and Beer evenings emerged Middle Earth and Narnia…
  • Merton (1264): J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) … a world expert on Beowulf. … Tolkien: “I am a hobbit in all but size. I like gardens, trees and unmechanized farmlands. I smoke a pipe and like good plain food (unrefrigerated), but detest French cooking. I like, and even dare to wear in these dull days, ornamental waistcoats. I am fond of mushrooms (out of a field); have a very simple sense of humour… I go to bed late and get up late (when possible). I do not travel much.” – “Hobbits are an unobtrusive but very ancient people, more numerous formerly than they are today; for they love peace and quiet and good tilled earth: a well-ordered and well-farmed countryside was their favourite haunt…” (Lord of the Rings preface).
  • Tolkien trail: 5 houses, 3 colleges, inkling meetings, grave
  • Pembroke College (1624): Samuel Johnson (1709-84)
  • Radcliffe Square / Bodleian Library (1602)
  • Somerville College (1879): (Mrs. Thatcher; Indira Ghandi) Iris Murdoch (1919-1999), novelist
  • University College (1249): P.B.Shelley (1792-1822)
  • Worcester College (1714): Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859)

23 May 2003, Φ Hamburger Stadtsalon: Beitrag “Gesundheit und Stadt”

23.5.2003, Hamburger Stadtsalon: Beitrag “Gesundheit und Stadt”

Einladung: „Es geht weiter: am 23. Mai 2003 findet der 3. Hamburger Stadtsalon statt. Rainer Fehr spricht zum Thema: Gesundheit und Stadt. – Rainer Fehr, Dr.med., Ph.D., Priv.-Doz., arbeitet in einem Institut für den öffentlichen Gesundheitsdienst. Er betreibt Forschungs- und Entwicklungsarbeit u.a. zu Epidemiologie, Wohnen/Wohnumfeld, Stadt und Gesundheit. – Beginn ist wieder um 20 Uhr, Gastgeber sind diesmal …: Loosen, Rüschoff+Winkler Architekten und Ingenieure und Niemann Architekten, Klopstockplatz 9, 22765 Hamburg.“


Hamburger Stadtsalon, veranstaltet von Olaf Bartels und Pinar Gönül:

  • 6.12.2002 (Nr. 1)
  • 4.2.2003 (Nr. 2)
  • 23.5.2003 (Nr. 3), Rainer Fehr: “Gesundheit und Stadt” (siehe oben)
  • 27.6.2003 (Nr. 4), Jörn Staeger zeigt ein Filmgedicht unter dem Motto “Ich und die Stadt”, Titel: Zielpunkte der Stadt (D 2003, 8 min)
  • 19.9.2003 (Nr. 5), Waltraut Kokot: Innenansichten – “Kultur der Obdachlosigkeit” in der Hamburger Innenstadt. Eine ethnologische Felduntersuchung
  • 14.11.2003 (Nr. 6), Olaf Bartels: Die aufgelöste Stadt – Tendenzen der deutschen Stadtentwicklung in der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts
  • 16.1.2004 (Nr. 7), Detlef Jessen-Klingenberg: Werner Hegemann – Architekturkritik der 20er Jahre zwischen Avantgarde und Tradition
  • 14.5.2004 (Nr. 8), Mathias Güntner: Dekonstruktion als Methode – Eingriffe in Architektur am Beispiel von Gordon Matta-Clark
  • 11.6.2004 (Nr. 9), Olaf Bartels: Nikosia – die geteilte Stadt – urbane Perspektiven eines politischen Konflikts.

2 Apr 2003, Φ Dortmund, NRW-Workshop Gesundheitsverträglichkeit und „Mitwirkung an Planung“ in Kommunen

2.4.2003, Dortmund, NRW-Workshop Gesundheitsverträglichkeit und „Mitwirkung an Planung“ in Kommunen

Lögd-Veranstaltung, Venue: Polizeipräsidium, Aula, Markgrafenstr. 102, 44139 Dortmund [03-34]

Programm:

  • 1. Einführung in das Tagungsthema
  • 2. Gesundheitsverträglichkeit bei Projektgenehmigungen und Planungsverfahren
  • 3. Methoden- und Systementwicklung zum Thema Gesundheitsverträglichkeit
  • 4. Perspektiven zur Gesundheitsverträglichkeit in den nordrhein-westfälischen Kommunen

Flyer:

28-30 Nov 2002, Φ Dresden, 10th Annual EUPHA Meeting: Bridging the Gap between Research and Policy in Public Health – Information, Promotion and Training

28.-30.11.2002, Dresden, 10th Annual EUPHA Meeting: Bridging the Gap between Research and Policy in Public Health – Information, Promotion and Training

Organiser: W. Kirch, TU Dresden. Venue: Hotel Hilton, Dresden.

Co-authored contributions:

  • Heuer A, Mekel O, Fehr R: Applicability of the tri-lateral methodological framework for impact estimation of road traffic related air pollution on health in Germany. Oral presentation in Workshop 4 (Integrated programs – transport and health. Chairs: Heuer A, Mekel O), 28.11.2002. Abstract: EJPH 12, no. 4, Suppl., p.17 [02-19]
  • Queste A, Fehr R, Kistemann T, Blettner M: Which geo-socio-economic factors predict mortality best? An analysis of small-area mortality rates in Germany. Poster #20.4. Abstract: EJPH 12, no. 4, Suppl., p.90 [02-08]
  • Abrahams, D., Birley, M., den Broeder, L., Elliott, I., Fehr, R., Mekel, O., Pennington, A, Scott-Samuel, A.: Workshop “Policy HIA for the EU”. Abstract: EJPH 12, no. 4, Suppl., p.20 [02-23]

25-27 Sep 2002, Φ Vienna / Wien: EnviroInfo 2002: Environmental Communication in the Information Society

25.-27.9.2002, Vienna / Wien: EnviroInfo Vienna 2002: Environmental Communication in the Information Society.

Proceedings:

  • Pillmann W, Tochtermann K (eds.) (2002): Environmental Communication in the Information Society. Part 1: eEIONET Work Conference; Environmental Informatics. Proceedings of the 16th International Conference Informatics for Environmental Protection, September 25-27, 2002, University of Technology, Vienna, Austria. International Society for Environmental Protection (ISEP).
  • Pillmann W, Tochtermann K (eds.) (2002): Environmental Communication in the Information Society. Part 2: Hypermedia Workshop, Eco-Informa Foundation Session, Environmental Communication, Education, Management and Environmental Media. Proceedings of the 16th International Conference Informatics for Environmental Protection, September 25-27, 2002, University of Technology, Vienna, Austria. International Society for Environmental Protection (ISEP).

Eigener Beitrag, publiziert in Part 1, pp.133-143: Fehr R: Environmental Health Information Management: Selected developments of potential relevance for the European perspective. [01-28]