Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Waiting for the ship to come in...

17 days.

1. Semester at Sea
Is this real life? Did I really sign up for a trip around the ENTIRE WORLD?! I can hardly believe it. Chris and I leave for Nassau in exactly 17 days. To Chris, it's just a little 5 day trip to Nassau...but I'm packing for four months and I can't exactly stop at the nearest Wal-Mart.

2. Santa
It feels SO nice to be home from school! It was really weird to say goodbye to everyone after I realized I probably won't see them until August 2011. There are so many pro's and con's to studying abroad in the Spring. I get to miss the really boring, yucky, cold winter months of January and February, don't miss any really big holidays, and I have the whole summer to look forward to as well! The only bad thing I can think of is, while everyone packed up for three weeks of winter break, I had to pack up my ENTIRE room and move it all home in 6 inches of snow. YAY. (And then once the car was packed, the car battery was dead. But that's another story....)

I was so excited and surprised to see Chris walk through the door the night I moved back home. We got to have a little Christmas together after all and I couldn't ask for anything better! What an awesome 12 hours!! He's the greatest!
I feel like I can't even think about packing for SAS until Christmas is over, especially since I believe lots of Christmas is going to revolve around the many random things I need for SAS. Christmas is almost here, the best time of year by far! The days until Jan 8th are ticking away but I'm trying to enjoy as much family and relaxation time as possible....I must say, so far it's been wonderful.

3. Summer
Spring is the time of year to look for internships in the advertising industry for the summer months. Except that's a problem. Because I'll be in the middle of the ocean. But of course Chris came to the rescue once again and contacted a mutual friend who offered me an internship for the summer at Clutch Studios in Chicago. I am SO excited to be in Chi-town for the summer. The best part about it is I wont be wondering where I'll be interning in the summer. Knowing before I leave is such a nice feeling! Now I just have to wonder where I'll be living....Maybe Oprah will offer me a little closet in her condo?

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Where Does Time Go?

Where does time go?

I'm asking myself this now...wondering how I will fit everything in before my Jan 8th flight to Nassau. I'm sure I'll also be asking myself this very question on April 24th when we arrive back in the states.

Lots has happened since the last time I posted. Last Wednesday I received my two vaccines for yellow fever and typhoid fever. I don't think having a cold helped while getting these shots. I thought I was on the mend with this yucky cold I have had, until Thursday morning when I felt like I was dying of some strange southern hemisphere disease....maybe yellow fever? I felt like that girl in the "Sick" poem by Shel Silverstein: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/16480 ...except I most certainly didn't want to go out and play.

I keep talking to my Mom about all the things that need to be packed from clothes that cover my knees in India to dresses for the Ambassador's Ball to European plug converters to the amounts of shampoo, conditioner, toothpaste, and ....girlie products I'll need. Apparently lots of it can't be purchased past South Africa. Shampoo+conditioner combination bottles NEVER work for me. Until I found this Garnier Fructis stuff. Which means, less luggage space taken up by bottles and more space for....everything else I need to jam in my bag for four months.

Everyone keeps asking me how excited I am to go on my "cruise." Or how big the boat is. Or they say it's so not academic and just a party at sea the whole time.
Lets clear some things up:
1. It's most definitely not a cruise. There IS indeed schoolwork involved. The syllabi are freaking me out. I'd call it more like a voyage.
2. It's not a boat. I'm not going to be floating around the world in a dinghy. That could get pretty intense and with my clumsiness, I probably wouldn't even make it to Dominica before falling out and being eaten by sharks. It's a ship.
3. I'm excited yes. But I'm also really scared. When I tell that to people everyone is like "But WHY are you scared? That's silly" Are you kidding me?! I've never step foot outside of this country (Canada doesn't count.) I'm scared to be in the minority, to be looked at as the "Ugly American." I'm scared I'll get lost, won't know how to communicate with locals, won't be able to call my Mom or Chris at a moments notice when I feel like the world is collapsing around me!!!!! But I'll make it. I know I will.

What else....
I got my visas back from Pinnacle and boy do they look SPIFFY!

I applied for a scholarship.....there's about a 1 in 325346 chance I'll get it. Plus with my luck with scholarships my chances decrease to about a 1 in 32534678390 chance. But hey, it's worth a shot. Like the lottery....ya can't win if you don't play. (That just made me sound like a lottery addict. Definitely not.)

I bought a trip to the Taj Mahal. I had a theory that after looking at pictures of it which look fake EVERY time, that the Taj really didnt exist. So my job, is to prove that it does exist. In order to do this Chris says I have to chip off a piece of the Taj and bring it back to him. I'll tell you how that pans out when you receive a letter from me in an Indian jail guarded by elephants. So after a million bank fiascos and talking to fraud and unblocking my debit card (thanks Mom!), I was finally able to book my trip to the Taj through an Indian travel agency's website...travelmyindia.com.

I also signed up for some trips in Dominica, Brazil and Ghana. River tubing, an Amazon culinary class, night time gator hunting on the Amazon (What am I thinking??), and some kind of Castles and Slave Dungeons in Ghana. SAS trips work like a lottery so I might not get any of these but figured I'd sign up for them as a back up.

I REALLY want to do this Basic Great Wall trip where you sleep in sleeping bags on the Great Wall for a night. But I don't know how it will work out with my required field practica for classes. So we'll see.

So I have exams this week. And I should be studying for them. But combinations of a bad cold and thoughts of SAS lead to little productivity and....Facebook. Or YouTube.

Here's a video that was posted by another SASer on Facebook....which led me to YouTube. Imagine that!

It's slightly ruined by the fact that it's a Louis Vuitton commercial. But I thought about it and this commercial ties in SO well to my interests (and vices...I like luggage/backpacks/bags)
The combination of culture, discovery, travel, pop culture, advertising, and thought provoking messages make me absolutely LOVE the message in this commercial. And the music is perfect too! :)

That's all for now....guess I should study. SIX DAYS LEFT!!!!



Monday, November 1, 2010

World Clock- Time Zones

World Clock - Time Zones

Time difference (based on EST) by port is listed below. To see the current time and date in countries around the world, please see Time and Date.com.

  • Dominica (+1 hour)
  • Brazil (+1 hour)
  • Ghana (+5 hours)
  • South Africa (+7 hours)
  • Mauritius (+9 hours)
  • India (+10.5 hours)
  • Singapore (+12 hours)
  • Viet Nam (+11 hours)
  • China (+12 hours)
  • Japan (+13 hours)
  • Hawaii (-6 hours)

Mail!

Just because I'll be traveling around the world doesn't mean mail can't reach me! So send me a letter, a postcard, memories from home :) I LOVE mail!

Here's how you address the envelope:

MV Explorer - Spring 2011 Voyage
ATTN: Kaitlyn Talbot
Port Agent Address (from list below)

In the port agent address, put one of the below addresses. Just make sure you send mail in time!...I don't know if they forward mail....I assume they do.

PORTADDRESS OF PORT AGENTSUGGESTED AIRMAIL DATE
Roseau, DOMINICA
Phone: 1 767 448 2181
Fax: 1 767 448 5787
H.H.V. WHITCHURCH & CO
71 Old street
POBox 771
ROSEAU, Brazil
January 3
Manaus, BRAZIL
Phone: 55 92 3234 4991
Fax: 55 92 3234 4830
INHCAPE SHIPPING MARINE SERVICES Ltda & AMAZON RIVER PORTS
Rua Eduardo Ribeiro 520
13° Andar - Sala 1301-1302
Ed. MAnaus Shopping Center Centro MANAUS - CEP 69-010-000 - AM
January 6
Takoradi, GHANA
Phone: 233 22 300 894
Fax: 233 22 202 989
HULL BLYTH
Seatec House / PO Box CO 214
Akosombo Road
Tema, GHANA
January 24
Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA
Phone: 27 21 419 8660
Fax: 27 21 413 0290
JOHN T. RENNIE & SONS
19th FLOOR
No.1 Thibault Square
8001 Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA
February 3
Port Louis, MAURITIUS
Phone: 230 202 70 40
Fax: 230 208 5814
Ireland Blyth Limited
Shipping Operations Department
No 6 Dr Ferriere Street
Port Louis, MAURITIUS
February 14

Cochin, INDIA
Phone: 84 8 825 7996
Fax: 852 2744 3240

J.M. BAXI & CO
N°26/1566 Subramaniam Road
Willingdon Island
KOCHI 682003, INDIA
February 21

Chennai, INDIA
Phone: 91 44 252 12032
Fax: 91 44 252 43813

J. M. Baxi & Co.
3rd Floor, Clive Battery Complex
4 & 4A, Rajaji Salai
Chennai 600 001, INDIA
March 2
Ho Chi Minh City, VIET NAM
Phone: 84 8 626 19602
Fax: 84 8 626 19603

CONTINENTAL CO LTD
55 Le Quoc Street
Ward 12
D. 4, Ho Chi Minh City, VIETNAM

March 7
HONG KONG, CHINA
Phone: 852 2786 1155
Fax: 852 2744 3240
Inchcape Shipping Services (HK) Ltd.
Units 1802-1805, 18th Floor
N° 3 Lockhart Road Wanchai,
HONG KONG - CHINA
March 14
Shanghai, CHINA
Phone: 86 21 6323 1350
Fax: 86 21 6329 1519
Penavico Shanghai
3/F 13 Zhong Shan Road (E 1)
Shanghai 200002, P.R. CHINA

March 17

Kobe, JAPAN
Phone: 81 78 391 3046
Fax: 81 78 391 3105
Inchcape Shipping Services (Japan) Ltd.
Kenryu Bld, Room 502
6, Kaigan-dori, Chuo-ku
Kobe-shi, Hygo-ken 650-0024, JAPAN
March 21
Yokohama, JAPAN
Phone: 81 45.201 6991
Fax: 81 45.212 1614
INCHCAPE SHIPPING SERVICES
F Asahi Seimei Yokohama Honcho Bldg
36, 4-Chome Honcho, Naka-ku
Yokohama-shi, Kanagawa-ken 231-0005, JAPAN
March 24

Hilo, HAWAII
Phone: 1 808 599 8604
Fax: 1 808 599 1950

Inchcape Shipping Services
521 Ala Moana Blvd.
Suite 256
Honolulu, HI 96813

April 4

Class Descriptions

International Marketing: This course introduces you to the concepts and challenges of global marketing. We'll examine how firms adopt strategies and adapt practices to succeed in diverse economic, cultural, and political environments. Students will evaluate our semester-at-sea destinations as markets to enter and recommend marketing mixes for those destinations.
Prerequisites/Special Requirements:
Small journal (pocket size) to record observations in the field

Global Popular Culture: Socialization is learning to become a member of a particular society. Agents of socialization, like families, schools, churches, and governments, shape and inform young and old alike by providing boundaries for self-identity and public and private behavior. Sociologists traditionally have not seen pop culture as one of those agents of socialization; we will do so in this course. Students will learn to "read" and critically analyze images and
representations. We will carefully examine how children and young adults around the world use pop culture to create their self and social identities, using the lens of gender and sexuality, race, class, and age. We will investigate global advertising, print and visual media, music and dance, as well as other pop culture expressions, like total environment simulacra (i.e.; Disneyland), using a critical cultural studies perspective. The methodology we will use is experiential and ethnographic, with opportunities in every port to gather data. Using all the data collected, we will learn how to analyze it, using critical analytic skills and a sociological imagination. Students will
thus be prepared as part of a team to design, conduct, and present an original research project. Thus, you will not be a passive recipient of knowledge in this class, but rather an active cultural critic, participating in lively discussions, written and oral assignments, individual and group assignments, and in-depth research. At the end of this course, you will be able to think critically about global pop culture, having completed your own original team research.

Global Studies: The Global Studies (GS) course for SAS Spring 2011 will require all students on the voyage to take a critical look at globalization and its impacts on cities and regions around the world. Globalization is usually defined as an array of forces that are effectively shrinking our world, and in this course we shall be investigating the local consequences of these forces. The introductory section of the course begins with a look at transnational movements (flows) of trade, finance, information, people and culture. We shall be investigating the way such flows operate in and through a network of linked cities around the world, the top tier of which function as the 'command and control' centers at the so-called core of the global economy (the global 'North'). As we head for Brazil and then across to Africa and beyond, the emphasis of the course shifts to the 'periphery,' where we begin our exploration of the global 'South.' We shall be visiting some of the lower tier cities of the world's urban hierarchy -- in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. The sources for Global Studies will include lectures and readings, supplemented with in-class discussions and debates, supplemented throughout with clips from documentaries and feature films. To this mix Global Studies this semester adds another dimension, involving fieldwork in the cities we visit along the way. This is the unique advantage of the Semester at Sea project, which allows us to step out of the classroom into the 'real' world, to flesh-out the 'local geographies of globalization' we have been learning about on board. One part of the fieldwork will come through SAS-sponsored FDP's and fieldtrips. Another component -- required for Global Studies this semester -- involves student fieldwork focusing on a specific research theme and conducted in groups (see later for a list of topics and a detailed description of the group projects).

Ethnography: Ethnography is integral to the discipline of anthropology. It is intrinsically tied to the development of anthropological theory and an excellent opportunity to practice various methods-above all qualitative, deep listening skills, that result in detailed description of humans, their behavior and the many facets that give their lives meaning. We will read a host of ethnographies that reflect the various Semester-at-Sea port visits. For each port we will read one ethnography. In so doing, we will explore various aspects of excellence in ethnographic research and writing. Students will try their own hand at ethnographic writing throughout the course by employing ethnographic methods, a number of directed field assignments, and interviewing techniques. The course will culminate with a group "ethnography" of our own experiences of our semester-at-sea. Issues of anthropological ethics, human subjects review, consent, establishing rapport, and respect for collaborators will be discussed in detail. We will also spend a good deal of time working on the skills associated with excellent interviewing techniques.

Class Registration

This morning was class registration at 8AM Eastern Time (I felt bad for all the Californians registering at 5AM!) I was so nervous that I wouldn't get the classes I needed because of my track record with past registration processes with Miami, BUT I got so lucky and got all my classes!!!

Classes are on A days and B days. We have class everyday that we are at sea and don't have class while we are in port. That means theres no weekends but we do have some days off.

We were pre-registered for our required Global Studies class and I was given B day.

Here's my schedule!

A Days
12:15-13:30 International Marketing

B Days
8:00-9:15 Global Popular Culture
9:20-10:35 Global Studies
12:15-13:30 Ethnography

Done by 13:30 (1:30PM) everyday! That means sun, fun & study!