Showing posts with label Kuwait. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kuwait. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2009

City Centre











Right across from the hotel where I stayed in Kuwait was the City Centre, which featured a lot of stores featuring traditional clothes, but which was also a little center of western consumerism. My favorite place, of course, was the Krispy Kreme Doughnuts shop (you can't get Krispy Kreme in Vermont - and do you really need any more proof of what savages Yankees are?). It's right around the corner from the McDonald's, Burger King, Nathan's Famous, Pizza Hut and Baskin Robbins - I boldly walked past the Dunkin Donuts.




GUST PIctures
















Let me see if I can post some pictures of GUST, the Gulf University of Science & Technology. At the top I've included a picture of the split level library that is open to the atrium - again, the floors are segregated by sex. It's right next to stairs and there is a screen between, which makes it more difficult for the guys to look up the skirts of the girls as they walk upstairs.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

GUST

I visited the Gulf University of Science and Technology (GUST) here in Kuwait City today. During a presentation I gave last fall in Fez, Morocco I met Ray Weisenborn, the dean of Arts & Sciences at GUST, and he discussed extending the GM network to Kuwait - this is pretty typical, which is why I give so many papers at conferences overseas (including four on this long trip). Anyway, we ended up running a GM with Mark Olson from GUST this semester on divorce in Kuwait and the US. The university is interesting in that all the classes are segregated by gender (a recent phenomenon caused by the election of more Islamist members to parliament) and we actually divided up a couple Champlain classes by gender to match up with the GUST courses, which was a real teachable moment for our Vermont students. The men and women even, technically, have separate wings and even floors of the library. I say technically because they mix fairly freely in the central area and the eating areas. At the same time the women dress in a more "western" fashion than any Arabic school I've ever visited. At a place like Zayed University in the UAE all the girls where the traditional black abaya and hihab - same with Sultan Qaboos University in Muscat, Oman. At a school like the University of Jordan you have a rough division into thirds - completely traditional, completely western, and somewhere in between (western wear and the hijab) - but even here the western wear would always be jeans. Here, on the other hand, you'd have a similar division into thirds, but the western students were actually wearing dresses or skirts and showing a fair amount of skin (as with Jordan, there has been a steady growth in the number of students wearing thw traditional wear in the last few years, although it's hard to say whether that is because of a growth in faith or as a result in a changing sense of fashion).. It's a strange mix because it's also a country which is pretty conservative in other ways - including a complete ban on all alcohol - causing many ex-pats to brew their own on the sly. I'll try and post some pictures later.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Kuwait Rock City

OK, I've made it to Kuwait City without too many problems. I'm not a real big fan of Kuwait Air Ai the food was pretty sub-par and the crew seemed to always have a chip on their shoulders about something - it's like once you got beyond a certain point they were OK, but that their initial response was to over react to every question or request (as if they were intended as an insult - of course, it could also just be the horror of dealing with ugly Americans on a daily basis). Of course, it might have just been the fact that during all quiet moments they played elevator music versions of "You Were Always on My Mind" and "You're the Wind Beneath My Wings.". On the London-Kuwait trip I sat next to a nice Indian woman named Jasmine Singh, who grew up in Kuwait and is a Sophomore at Iowa State University. Kuwait, like the UAE, has a large subcontinent population.

Ray Weisborn and Mark Olson from the Gulf University of Science & Technology picked up at the airport. Then they took me to Applebee's because it was convenient. Kuwait has a ton of American chain franchises, including a series of the largest Burger Kings I've ever seen. I'm staying at the Ritz Salmiya which is pretty nice, although there is no pool or exercise facility, so I should have worked through the painyesterday and lifted weights - I have missing workouts. I'll know more tomorrow about Kuwait when I might it over to GUST.