Tag Archives: university

Day 1 – Session ‘Mind the Gap!’

Ruta Norvaisaite and Leo zum Voerde

In her introduction of the workshop, the moderator, Nora Bieberstein stated that students in Maastricht experience and participate in the widespread student culture which offers e.g. music festivals, cinema, student theatre, organized parties and so on. However, as inhabitants of Maastricht it can also be observed that there is a local culture with its own traditions and cultural circles bearing cultural events like Carnival, Tefaf. These two different types of cultural offer and people who seem to make use of it seem to be separated from each other. The aim of this session was to discuss this potentially existent gap between student life and local Maastricht citizens in order to come to answers for questions like:

- Is it possible to define or characterize the University’s and its student’s relationship with Maastricht and its citizens in general terms?
- Can we argue that the integration of students to Maastricht’s cultural life is hindered by rather practical problems such as a lack of information and the rather pricy activities?
- Is Maastricht a special case or can we draw comparisons to other ‘college towns’?

After a short a video clip produced by students of Maastricht University, each of the four speakers was given time to give a general statement about his or her view on the cultural life in Maastricht regarding the gap between student body and local citizen culture.

Leo zum Vörde sive Vörding started the discussion by telling students to not bridge the gap. He said that a city like Maastricht cannot do without young urban professionals and students. Furthermore, there is always the controversy between a) the city should take care of us and b) these young urban people have to find there own way within the citylife. Therefore, he thinks that we need more commitment to each other and more public debate. According to him, the ECOC competition could be used as a framework that necessitates change in this aspect. Nevertheless, he repeatedly stated that the student body plays a very crucial role in the city since they think and feel ‘from the outside’. He concluded that we need more courageous students that speak out, act and dare to dream. He stated that this session is an excellent example that shows how crucial critical students are that produce interpretations. During the open discussion at the end of the session, he remarked that a city like Maastricht is a ‘public mental space’ with dynamics and movements and “if students adapt too soon, we lose the place for interpretation”.

According to Ruta Norvaisaite, student at Maastricht University, students come to Maastricht with one major goal – to study, or at least we should assume that. Therefore, we cannot expect from them more than minimum effort to find the cultural activities. No doubt, those who search – find it. However, those who would like to participate, but simply do not have time for searching (which includes not only Googling but learning Dutch, building up social networks, being part of various organizations and mailing lists) are left completely behind. Much of the information is either in Dutch or circulated through personal networks. Thus, she stated that the gap can be filled in by better and more thorough provision of information.

Rein de Wilde, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at Maastricht University pointed out that all university cities have experienced tensions between the student body and ”ordinary’” citizens. In small cities with a long university tradition, such as Oxford, Heidelberg or Leiden, it took centuries for students and citizens to realize that they really depend upon each other. Then, Maastricht is a small university city as Oxford and the like, but does not have this long history of cohabitation. Therefore quite some ‘locals’ still perceive the university as an alien element. Even the municipality does not quite know how to handle or approach the university. On the other hand, de Wilde said that most people studying in Maastricht or working in the university are not born in Maastricht or its region. They feel no incentive to integrate in what they perceive as a rather closed regional culture. “Yet there are signs of change” as is illustrated by the fact that the movie theater Lumière leads the way in taking students and foreigners serious by offering English subtitling on special evenings or that Studium Generale has become bilingual within just a few years. Concluding, de Wilde stressed that if Maastricht wants to welcome art projects and cultural initiatives of world class quality, its cultural (and economic) policies should be coordinated on the level of the (Eu)region.

Finally, Maike van Storch from ‘Weekin/Weekuit’, the weekly cultural agenda of Maastricht that is coupled to the website http://www.maastricht.net noted that she seems to be standing in the middle of the gap as a journalist with an informing role. She said that an English website is recently under construction and pointed to the existence of a magazine like ‘Crossroads’. She argued that they don’t get a lot of input from students who live in their own circle and that is why “it’s not easy to approach students” since they don’t easily react. Besides, she added that there is a new cultural initiative for new students at Maastricht University, the pimpas which gives students price reductions for cultural highlights in the region. Recognizing the enclosed character of Maastricht she affirmed that “you would have to marry a local to truly integrate yourself in the local culture”.

Summarizing the results of the discussion Nora Bieberstein argued that “there is a gap” and it has both its positive and negative aspects. Because, on the one hand, the gap leads to a greater cultural diversity that should not be changed but productively used, but, on the other hand, the gap produces separation and exclusion of students from Maastricht’s cultural life. Thus, integration and diversity are opposing each other and this is what constitutes the gap. Leo zum Vörde sive Vörding stated that self-organization is one part of the solution and Rein de Wilde introduced a new concept – an ‘urban campus’ that is a serious interest of the university. Evaluating the gap, de Wilde said that in the short-term the only solution seems to become bilingual.

Text: Ali Konyali

Day 2 – Session ‘Destination Maastricht & Cultural DNA?’

Destination Maastricht and Cultural DNA

The following workshop split into various discussions and issues expressed from the participants of the workshop. The workshop was opened with the idea that we should translate themes into storylines, and from there into projects, after which we can find institutions to manage these projects.

Pieter Calje started of the discussion stating that storylines are a brilliant idea and that we need to rethink a city/region which is in flux and needs a new identity. We need to discuss practices. A project would be to create identity not by living with the back to each other, but to plan together and create bottom-up projects and see what storylines we get out of them.

Jeroen Boomgaard jumps in here to say that he is allergic to the work storyline, at least in the way that it is so frequently used. Boomgaard states that we should open up discourse. The last thing anyone is waiting for is a storytale. We need to think about difference and work with them, thinking of culture in a layered fashion. If we start working with a storyline from the start, it will be a hopeless case.

Will Munsters throws in that we need to work with a process of co-creation. We need to deal with the inhabitants, visitors and entrepreneurs; these entrepreneurs being the (creative) industries.

So what about universities? Are they to be left out? Britta Riegel throws in. This question is followed by ideas from Susan Schaefer who states that the audience for whom this project is created must be looked at first. For whom are we creating what? Who are we doing this for and why? Petra Driessen goes further into this argument stating that there needs to be a compelling reason to change. We need to do research. We must talk to the people we are doing it for and find out what the underlying concept is that they are looking for.

Calje dives into the discussion saying that there is a crisis in Maastricht. Maastricht the beautiful is a façade, because there is a real socio-economic crisis going on and Maastricht is in dire need of reinventing itself. As Henk van de Voort explains, there is much crisis, there are many point of trouble, but this crisis is not totally visible.
If we really do need ECOC, how to go about it? Neil Peterson explains that we should not forget about competition and our strengths. By understanding where we have problems and where our strengths are, we can build on these to give things to Europe and ECOC. Other than just recognizing our strengths and weaknesses, Anne Lorentzen points out that we must also recognize for who we are doing it and what their needs and resources are. In order to get started, bottom-experts are needed. Calje fills in to say that, it is not just who I am doing it for, but also, who am I doing it with?

Jorijn Neyrinck adds a nice keyword to sum up a lot of the discussion: TRANSFER. In the making of Maastricht or for that matter in the making of Europe there is still a long way to go. We need to cross borders and open up minds. A difficult task awaits us.

Text: Sophie Kromholz

Mind the Gap! Student Cultures and Maastricht Life

Maastricht is often celebrated as a city with a prosperous cultural life with museums, theatres, cinemas and numerous festivals each year. In addition, the city’s international student body enriches cultural diversity. However, it seems inadequate to speak of one common culture of Maastricht. On the one hand there is a local culture with its own traditions and cultural circles, whereas on the other hand there is a widespread student culture. These two cultural bodies are not always successfully integrated. Thus, is it possible to assess the university’s relationship with Maastricht in general terms? Can we argue that the integration of students to Maastricht’s cultural life is hindered by rather practical problems such as a lack of information and the rather pricy activities? Is Maastricht a special case or can we draw comparisons to other ‘college towns’?

Speakers:
Nora Bieberstein (Moderator – Maastricht University)
Leo zum Vörde sive Vörding (Municipality of Maastricht)
Rein de Wilde (Maastricht University)
Ruta Norvaisaite (Maastricht University)

Destination Maastricht

As elsewhere, in Maastricht the relative decline of industrial labor has led to a search for new imaginaries that can guide urban development. From Maastricht as a shopping city and major tourist destination to Maastricht as an internationally-oriented university town, all of these new imaginaries are unthinkable without acknowledging the role of increased mobility. What is the role of mobility for culture in Maastricht? How does the city brand itself as a destination across the region and the world? In what ways do the internationalization of education and the temporary presence of students shape the very cultural texture of the city?

Speakers:
Peter Peters (Moderator – Hogeschool Zuyd, Maastricht, Netherlands)
Jeroen Boomgaard (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Anne Lorentzen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
Zora Jaurova (Košice 2013 European Capital of Culture, Slovakia)