Thursday, February 12, 2009

Quick update. Last weekend was tons of fun. My friends and I went to the disco every night which was exhausting but super fun. Thursday Friday and Saturday, we basically went out around 10 stayed out until 5:00 (which apparently is kind of early). Woke up the next morning, walked around the city during the day, and then started all over again. I had a ton of fun but I have to say I don't know how the Spaniards do it, I'm absolutely exhausted. 
I feel like I have a much better idea of the city than I did last week. I have classes in different parts of the city, and also we just go for paseos every day after siesta. People do that here. Just go out for paseos. No destination necessary. It's a totally different mentality. 
We've been exploring bars and discos around different parts of the city and found this really cool area near the facultad de ciencias where there is a really young college crowd which is fun. Last night, we went to see the Spanish seleccion play against England in an international friendly exhibition match that actually took place in Sevilla. The bar was packed to the brim and people were going crazy. I love being able to witness so much passion for soccer, it's great. 
My friend from home, Caroline, was supposed to come today from London but she missed her flight. I was pretty bummed, but I'm meeting her in Madrid for the weekend along with my friends from IES Kate, Johanna, Mary, and Lydia. It should be a lot of fun. I hope to do a whirlwind tour of El Prado, La Reina Sophia, and El Thyssen. Hope. 
Hope all is going great! I'd love emails/comments/to hear from you as well!

Friday, February 6, 2009

Unos viajes y la primera semana de clases

It's been about two weeks since I've updated. It's hard to believe I've even been here long enough to say that, but at the same time I feel like I've been here forever. Everything has been going really well. Two weeks ago, we had another week of orientation but it involved a lot of exams. We had a written exam, a grammatical exam, and an oral exam. During spanish class each morning, we mostly just walked around the city to become oriented with different neighborhoods. I still feel like I have a lot of the city to explore. It's easy to stick to the parts you know after a few weeks but I want to make sure to get to know all of the city. 
One day, we went on a paseo to the Sacremonte which is a very different part of the city. It's only about a 20 minute walk from the center, but its completely distinct from the center. It's all white little houses up on a hill (a very steep large hill). There are a lot of gypsies up there, and therefore a lot of places to watch flamenco or hear Spanish guitar. You can see a beautiful view of the Alhambra from there, it's incredible. Many of the houses up there are actually caves. The living spaces are practically carved in the mountain which is really neat. 
Last Friday morning, we left at 9:00 am (after a night out a the disco... rough) to go to a small town called Ronda. Although its tiny, it was one of the capitals of Andalucia. It's a well known city despite its size because it's perched up on the side of a canyon. It was completely defended from attack because it is literally impossible to get to unless you take the one bridge that connected it to the mainland. Orson Welles and Ernest Hemingway spent summers in Ronda writing about Spanish culture and corrida (bull-fighting). Because it's not currently toro season, we got to go into the plaza del toros and walk around inside and learn about the whole process. It was super interesting, but also kind of rough to hear about the details of how the infuriate the bull, make him aggressive, and then methodically kill him. We also saw turkish baths in Ronda that were meant as a place for the whole town to bathe before entering the nearby mosque (which is now destroyed like pretty much every mosque in spain). We learned about how they varied the temperature and everything, it was very cool. 
After hanging out for a while, we left Ronda and drove to Sevilla. Sevilla was beautiful, I loved it. The first night, IES threw us a formal cocktail party which was a lot of fun. The next day, we went to the Sevilla Cathedral and the Alcazar. The Alcazar was the palace built by the kings of Sevilla. It was added onto during each successive reign, just like the Alhambra. The Cathedral of Sevilla was beautiful; it was originally a mosque that the Catholics tore down. They planted a cathedral directly on top of the ruins of the mosque, but they kept one of the minarets and used it instead as a bell tower. Saturday night, we went to a Flamenco show which was SO cool. It was one of the most intense things I've ever seen. The guitarist, singer, and dancers were all extremely passionate. I really enjoyed Sevilla except for the outrageous amounts of rain that came on Sunday.
Last Monday was our first day of real classes. I'm taking Spanish grammar (8:45 every morning), Islamic Art and Architecture, Mediterranean Ecosystems (the only class I'm taking in English), Islamic Civilization in Spain and North Africa until 1492, and Women in Mediterranean Film. I was dying to get into Flamenco but it was full. I'm on the waitlist, but my hopes are not high because everyone really wants to take that class. Other than that, I'm happy with my classes, they all seem really interesting. I really like that the subjects are such that there would be no better place to study them than Granada. It makes everything really relevant. 
A lot of my classes have non-conventional class time which makes it fun. I have visits in Art and Architecture for half of class every week, movies in the film class, and field trips in Med. Ecosystems. I think this will keep everything fun.
This is our first completely free weekend which should be really fun. I'll write again soon! I put up pictures on facebook but for those of you without access you can check them out via these urls:
 - http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2037347&l=f6286&id=3904198
 - http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2037349&l=5c606&id=3904198