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5 Reasons You Should Join a Student Club or Society

Illustration by Tyler Doupe from Student Life Network

join a student club

From meeting new people to gaining administrative, creative, and leadership experience—joining a student club can set you up for wild success. Here’s the drill. You want to get some of that free swag or maybe a nice-looking baked good from one of the groups at your school but you know it often comes with a hidden cost: […]

From meeting new people to gaining administrative, creative, and leadership experience—joining a student club can set you up for wild success.

Here’s the drill. You want to get some of that  free swag  or maybe a nice-looking baked good from one of the groups at your school but you know it often comes with a hidden cost: time spent listening to the students offering said goodies, explaining to you why joining their club or society will be the greatest thing ever.

Here’s the thing: they’re probably right .

I began my first year of university with the dream of becoming a writer. However, first-year English was not all sunshine and roses. I was repeatedly told that my essays were “too imaginative” and “too implausible”. I felt defeated, but didn’t give up— I started my own writing club with one clear vision: empower fellow dreamers. By the end of the year, I had 7 executive members by my side, a published book, a photo project, and 40+ helping hands of young aspiring writers across the city.

The experience was a total game-changer.

So whether you’re starting one or joining one, getting involved with the right student club or society will help you in ways that will dramatically improve your student experience.

1. You meet new people.

You might not identify with any particular student club or society. Maybe, you simply want to join one to do something with your spare time. Either way, you’re almost guaranteed to make new friends. If you’re joining to explore opportunities within your field, you can find a way to meet professionals at companies you’re interested in. Certain clubs and societies even curate experiences to connect students with these professionals, some of whom are alumni. This could make your life a whole lot easier when you graduate and pursue a career in your desired field.

I’ve been able to meet amazing professionals through the society I joined. In fact, I was able to speak with an education coordinator from Microsoft at their headquarters! The opportunity helped me to better understand that I’m not the best fit for that role/company, which is still a valuable thing to learn early on. On another occasion, I met a marketing director at a creative agency. This opened up the door to an internship that left me believing that a career in marketing and public relations was what I truly wanted.

2. You find people who have similar interests.

If you’re someone who has no idea what they want to do with their career, participating in extra-curricular activities will bring you closer to people who have the same hobbies or interests as you. By surrounding yourself with people who have similar interests, you gain:

  • Peer Motivation.  Their hard work, motivation, and dedication to their education and professional development will positively impact your mindset. Your friends will push you and encourage you to study with them, attend events together, and keep you accountable.
  • Shared Information.  Your friends will want what is best for you. On occasion, they will share with you opportunities or information about important companies, career paths, job fairs, and professional conferences.
  • Empathy.  You’ve got a stronger shared experience with your friends. You’ll understand their goals, their challenges, and their feelings a lot better.

You can also use this opportunity to explore different interests. You don’t need to be a philosophy major to join the philosophy club. Want to learn to dance? There’s usually a club for that too. You get the idea.

3. You discover that there’s more to school than assignments, tests, and a degree.

In the words of Steve Jobs:

“Do what you love. Have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become.”

Although a college dropout, Jobs created a company worth over $1 trillion and initiated several paradigm shifts in consumer technology. Joining a student club or society will bring you closer to people who want to do big, creative, and imaginative things. In fact, it’s how Steve Jobs met Steve Wozniak.

By being around people you want to be like, it’s easier to feel motivated and to know that you are on the right track. Most people around you in school focus on going to classes only to go home soon after. By making friends and connecting with a community who are constantly striving to do more with their time, you will find it easier to do more with yours.

4. You get valuable administrative, creative, and leadership experience.

When graduation comes around, you’ll quickly discover that your academic experience is not always enough. With internships, co-op placements, and facilitated networking happening all around you, you need to take advantage of every single competitive edge you can get. It might seem like “just a student club” to some, but in reality, being a part of a student club builds a lot of valuable skills, including:

  • Team management
  • Volunteer coordination
  • Stakeholder management
  • External relations
  • Event planning

Many of these skills can be transferable to a wide variety of industries. They can be the difference between you and another candidate. Make “fail fast, fail often” your mantra; by putting yourself through more experiences, and giving yourself opportunities to make mistakes and learn from them. It’s better to make mistakes while in school than at your first corporate job.

5. You can find job opportunities through club alumni.

Speaking from experience, my society focused on connecting students to alumni who graduated with the same degree as theirs. We created events where students met with alumni who took on jobs in industries they were interested in. Some students were even lucky enough to receive job opportunities using these connections. These events were so important because they made first-year students feel comfortable connecting to the alumni, who went through the same struggles as them. Knowing that the hard work would pay off someday encouraged them to stay motivated.

Likewise, many students find it difficult to write and format resumes , so another event we created was The Resume Critique night. We invited students to perfect their resumes with professionals from various industries and it was yet another professional resource students could pick up from a club.

BONUS: Even more reasons to join a student club or society.

And if all of the aforementioned reasons weren’t enough for you, here’s a quick list of even more reasons why you should join a club. You will…

  • Get to indulge in your passions and build your skills (sports, creativity, leadership, social justice).
  • Have valuable experience to put on your resume when you graduate (or even before, when you are looking for a summer job or internship).
  • Learn and make mistakes when you are young and with fewer consequences.
  • Be able to pursue your own ideas with the funding and human resources available to you.
  • Learn how to communicate, work in, and manage a team.
  • Wear multiple hats. If you work for a small company, you will learn how everything works. In a club, that holds true even more strongly.
  • Be more productive. Joining a club or society can motivate you to get out of bed every day.
  • Experience the joy of providing meaningful and valuable opportunities to other students.

University doesn’t always challenge you in practical, hands-on ways. A student club or society can. Remember: you’re a student. Your coworkers are students. You all get it. In a club or society, you can pretty much find the most accommodating work experience you’ll ever get.

essay on social club

How about joining our student club?

*Opinions expressed are those of the author, and not necessarily those of Student Life Network or their partners.

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Aida Jahjah

Aida is a professional writer, poet, aspiring designer and event manager (and an occasional model). Check out her thoughts, photographs, and inspiration at aidajahjah.me

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UCT

8 reasons why you should join a club or society

essay on social club

There’s a world of positive benefits of being involved in student clubs and societies. Here are just eight of them.

1. Widen your social network , make new friends and meet people who share your interests. If, for example, twitching is your thing, you’ll find that birds of a feather flock together at Birding UCT. Or, since almost all major beliefs, doctrines and denominations are represented on campus, you can find fellowship in the faith society of your choice.

2. Discover new interests . Who knew hip-hop could be such fun? Or perhaps you want to hone your debating skills. There are also classic activities on offer from organisations like the Ballroom and Latin Dancing Society, UCT African Choral, and the Wine and Cultural Society.

3. Nurture fresh skills , create new connections and boost future prospects. Clubs and societies also provide advantages in terms of your future employability. Women in Computer Science, Black Law Students’ Forum, Engineers Without Borders and the Investment Society are just four that could look good on your CV.

4. Give back to the community . If you care about the environment, you might consider joining the Green Campus Initiative. If animal welfare is close to your heart, We Are Animals will interest you. Or, you could consider taking up the cause of Equal Education.

5. Learn more about yourself . Joining a student organisation presents many opportunities to get to know yourself, your goals and your strengths better. This self-awareness can be beneficial in future. Maybe test your mentoring skills by joining the Golden Future Project, which works to empower others.

6. Develop expertise and experience in event planning and organisation. Most clubs and societies depend on meetings, socials, competitions, trips and fundraisers for their success. If you become a committee member, you can gain invaluable experience. Give the Debating Union a test drive and you’ll have a chance to polish your presentation skills too.

7. Achieve a balance . It’s healthy to have breaks from your studies from time to time! While the primary objective of being here is to study and earn a degree, being involved with a club or society can help you lead a balanced university life. Membership in the UCT Entrepreneurs Society might help you to explore your capacity for innovation and resourcefulness.

8. Integrate on campus . It can be challenging, as a first-year, to adapt to student life. Clubs and societies provide an excellent way to integrate. It’s a good way of making friends with people who are not necessarily doing the same course as you. Have a look at the societies categorised as national/cultural for some ideas.

Join the clubs

Whether it’s academic, religious, cultural, social or political, one of the more than 100 student clubs and societies on campus will be a fit for you. You can find out more about them during O-Week on Jammie plaza, and either sign up on the spot with the societies that interest you, or pay membership fees to the cashiers on level five of the Steve Biko Students’ Union building (or have membership fees charged to your student account).

Check out the societies website at www.dsa.uct.ac.za/student-development/student-societies-organisations/overview for the full list!

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108 Social Issues Essay Topic Ideas & Examples

Inside This Article

Social issues are complex and multifaceted problems that affect individuals, communities, and societies as a whole. These issues can range from poverty and inequality to discrimination and environmental degradation. Writing an essay on a social issue can be a daunting task, but it can also be a rewarding experience that allows you to explore and analyze important topics that impact the world around you.

To help you get started, here are 108 social issues essay topic ideas and examples that you can use as inspiration for your next writing assignment:

  • The impact of social media on mental health
  • Income inequality and its effects on society
  • Police brutality and the Black Lives Matter movement
  • The rise of fake news and its impact on democracy
  • Gender inequality in the workplace
  • Climate change and its effects on vulnerable communities
  • The opioid crisis and its impact on communities
  • The criminal justice system and racial disparities
  • Homelessness and poverty in America
  • The refugee crisis and global migration patterns
  • LGBTQ+ rights and discrimination
  • The rise of nationalism and its impact on global politics
  • Gun control and mass shootings in America
  • Environmental racism and its effects on marginalized communities
  • The impact of globalization on developing countries
  • Mental health stigma and access to treatment
  • Cyberbullying and online harassment
  • The #MeToo movement and sexual harassment in the workplace
  • Access to healthcare and the rising cost of medical care
  • The impact of technology on social relationships
  • Food insecurity and hunger in America
  • The effects of gentrification on low-income communities
  • Disability rights and accessibility
  • The criminalization of poverty and homelessness
  • Human trafficking and modern-day slavery
  • The impact of colonialism on indigenous communities
  • The rise of authoritarianism and threats to democracy
  • The education achievement gap and disparities in schools
  • Mental health challenges facing college students
  • The impact of social isolation on mental health
  • The influence of religion on social norms and values
  • The effects of gentrification on cultural identity
  • The impact of social media on political discourse
  • The role of activism in social change
  • Access to clean water and sanitation in developing countries
  • The impact of social media on body image and self-esteem
  • The effects of income inequality on public health
  • The criminalization of drug addiction and mental illness
  • The impact of climate change on indigenous communities

These are just a few examples of social issues that you can explore in your essay. Remember to choose a topic that you are passionate about and that you feel strongly about. Researching and writing about social issues can be a powerful way to raise awareness and advocate for change in the world. Good luck with your essay!

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Community Development Organization: “Thukhur Social Club” Essay

Introduction, description of the organization, plan for enhanced partnerships.

The formation of organizations is usually geared towards the attainment of predetermined goals. The realization of the set ends could become challenging if an organization does not have the capacity to implement all its strategies. For this reason, partnerships are recommended whereby an organization collaborates with other agencies to complement their operations.

Partnerships are essential, especially in the social services sector, which aims at enhancing positive social change through empowerment (Thopa, 2014). This paper will analyze a particular community development organization, the services offered, types of partnerships that it engages in, and the challenges it faces coupled with how the partnerships can be enhanced to facilitate quality services provision.

As a requirement of the Families and Community course, an organization was to be chosen by students who would volunteer their services in various areas as per the objectives of the organization. This reflection will be based on an elderly center called the “Thukhur Social Club.” The center operates in the UAE with its premises located in the city of Dubai at a place called Al Barsha. The Thukhur Social Club is strategically situated in a villa neighborhood that provides a conducive environment for the elderly to receive services meaningful to them.

The elderly club was established in 2013 by the UAE government to provide social services to the people above the age of 60 years. The initiative was a pioneering move since there are no similar agencies in the UAE ( CDA , 2015).

The Community Development Authority (CDA) oversees the activities of the club to ensure that they are in line with the objective of empowering the elderly group in society. Funding for the club’s activities is from the UAE central government, whereby budgetary allocations have been made for the execution of such services.

The Thukhur Social Club offers a range of services to the older persons within Dubai and its environs. Some of the services provided include basic education, recreation and entertainment, and physical fitness. This goal is facilitated by the presence of a library, a spa, a gym area, and a spacious living room. The library seeks to enhance the literacy skills of the elderly, whereby the staff members assist them in reading and writing.

Well-wishers, who saw the significance of empowering the elderly in society, donated most books found in the library. A good number of books found in the library are historical and religious. The spacious and attractive living room allows the elders to move freely and relax comfortably as they socialize and discuss different relevant issues. In addition, the living room acts as an entertainment area where games and other fun activities are carried out.

The gym area is primarily set for facilitating physical fitness exercises among the elderly. The club’s elderly women are specifically advantaged, given the presence of a spa and a beauty section in the club. The spa area allows elderly women to relax and attend to their skin and hair.

The Thukhur Social Club engages in partnerships with various other parties that support its activities towards promoting positive social change among the elderly. The club is in constant association with the CDA, the government, learning institutions, the community, and the media. The club maintains a healthy relationship with the government, given that it was a pioneer project by the government in the social services sector. The organization also maintains partnerships with the CDA.

The CDA manages and oversees the operations of the club, as it seeks to make Dubai a model that inspires the well-being of the community. The club partners with the CDA to ensure the unceasing elevation of the elderly’s living standards through the integration of policies and services of desirable quality.

In a bid to give back to society, the club partners with schools in Dubai as it targets to inspire the younger generation and provide moral guidance. For instance, the club organized a trip to a local school aimed at socializing and exchanging ideas on the impacts of the contemporary world to the current generation. Cultural aspects such as marriages and the preparation of traditional recipes were discussed in line with the traditional and secular values.

It was observed that the club partners with the media houses for purposes of raising awareness about the existence of the club and its aims. The club’s messages about the need for improving the well-being of the elderly are usually channeled via the media. The social club also partners with the community in the upgrading of its library facility. The community around Al Barsha has donated books to the club, thus facilitating learning among the elderly.

Partnerships between Thukhur Social Club and other agencies such as the CDA, government, and the community have portrayed the significance of such engagements for the success of the clubs’ endeavors. However, some weaknesses exist within the partnerships, thus leading to inefficiencies in its operations. Since the club aims at providing social services that would improve the well-being of the elderly in Dubai, strengthening the partnerships is vital.

The loopholes evident in the partnerships include the lack of professional management of the various services offered by the club and the scope of operations. In this light, the club lacks the specialized personnel to run the various services offered, and its intent of improving the lives of the elderly is limited only to the Al Barsha area and its immediate environs. On the issue of professional services inadequacies, the club has failed to offer specialized attention to its various departments.

For instance, the library lacks a librarian to guide and assist the elderly in how they can access books on particular topics. Those who cannot understand the Arabic discourse face translation challenges. This aspect would have been made better if a professional librarian could handle the translation roles to incorporate elders from different cultural backgrounds.

The gym areas lack instructors to help the elderly carry out basic exercises to improve their physical fitness and health in general. Workers help elderly women in the spa and beauty section, but this move is insufficient since the nature of such services needs expert attention.

On the other hand, the Thukhur Social Club is limited in the scope of its operations, as it does not extend its services to the greatest majority in Dubai. For this reason, the club has not been in a position to serve all the elderly persons that need to be empowered. Therefore, its operations tend to foster exclusion of other individuals who might be vulnerable but residing outside Al Barsha.

In addition, the facility is not large enough to accommodate a large number of elders since extra beneficiaries are expected to join the club with time. In this regard, the growth aspect of the club has not been factored in its partnership with the government.

Therefore, the formulation and implementation of specific plans are essential aspects for the improvement of partnerships that would, in return, enhance its service provision (Wacker & Roberto, 2013). For the first weakness, the oversight authority, viz. CDA should formulate policies aimed at recruiting professional individuals to run the various social institutions it manages, including the club.

This move could entail advertising vacant positions in the club, encouraging graduates to take internship programs in the club, or seeking professional volunteers from the community. Therefore, the Thukhur Social Club management, in collaboration with CDA, should devise a recruitment plan that prioritizes the services that need special attention.

The scope of the club’s operations could be widened if the partnership with the government is reviewed and strengthened. The CDA should lobby for the devolution of social service resources. In this case, decentralizing the disbursement of funds needed for the development of the elderly centers would put the CDA in a better position to expand the club and establish new branches.

Thus, the expansion of the facility to other regions in the UAE would help attain the CDA’s vision of integrating the elderly from all over Dubai to elevate their well-being. Consequently, more clubs for the elderly would be established, thus widening the operations of Thukhur Social Club to other areas to benefit more elders.

In conclusion, partnerships play an important role in the realization of an organization’s endeavors. The case of the Thukhur Social Club portrayed both strong and weak aspects of its operations. The club manifested its strengths in collaborating with the community in terms of education programs such as visits to schools and being provided with books for its library.

Weaknesses in its partnerships lie in the lack of capacity to provide specialized services and extend its services to other potential elderly beneficiaries within the UAE. Plans to enhance effective partnerships such as the devolution of funds and recruitment of professionals need to be implemented for the better management of the social services.

CDA: Elderly Services. (2015). Web.

Thopa, M. (2014). NGO Partnerships: Opportunities and Challenges . Saarbrücken, Germany: LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing.

Wacker, R., & Roberto, K. (2013). Community Resources for Older Adults: Programs and Services in an Era of Change. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications.

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essay on social club

Chuck Palahniuk

Ask litcharts ai: the answer to your questions.

Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club . Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides.

Fight Club: Introduction

Fight club: plot summary, fight club: detailed summary & analysis, fight club: themes, fight club: quotes, fight club: characters, fight club: symbols, fight club: theme wheel, brief biography of chuck palahniuk.

Fight Club PDF

Historical Context of Fight Club

Other books related to fight club.

  • Full Title: Fight Club
  • When Written: 1994-1995
  • Where Written: Portland, Oregon, USA
  • When Published: August 17, 1996
  • Literary Period: Postmodernism, punk
  • Genre: Transgressive fiction, Contemporary novel
  • Setting: Contemporary America
  • Climax: The Narrator shoots himself
  • Antagonist: It’s unclear: Tyler Durden could be considered the antagonist, or, more abstractly, corporate America and consumer culture
  • Point of View: First person (The Narrator)

Extra Credit for Fight Club

Family connections. Palahniuk is a distant relative of the Academy Award-winning Hollywood actor Jack Palance (hence the similar surnames).

The fight that started it all. Palahniuk has stated on several occasions that he got the idea for Fight Club after going on a camping trip and getting in a bad fight that left his face horribly bruised. When Palahniuk showed up for work a few days later, he was amazed to find that colleagues refused to acknowledge his beaten face, avoiding eye contact with him at all times. The surreal incident formed the basis for Palahniuk’s most famous novel.

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The Spectator Club – Summary

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Fresh Reads

The Spectator Club is perhaps Richard Steele’s finest achievement. This essay was published in The Spectator . In this essay, Steele has given an account of the members of the Club. These members represent important sections of society. Steele describes six of the members of the Club they are Sir Roger de Coverley, Captain Sentry, Sir Andrew Freeport, Will Honeycomb, the Clergyman and the Student of Law.

Steele talks about the first gentleman of his company whose name is Sir Roger de Coverley. The people, who knew about the county of Sir Roger,knew Sir Roger. Sir Roger was a man of extra ordinary nature and had a good sense. He always found fault with the ways of the world but this unusual nature never made him any enemies. Sir Roger had a unique capacity to please others. Sir Roger was a bachelor because he was disappointed in the love of a beautiful widow. Before this disappointment Sir Roger was a normal happy young man. He moved in society of important persons like Lord Rochester and Sir George Etherege. However, after being ill-used by the widow he lost all his joviality and interest in social life for more than a year . He became very serious. Gradually his joviality returned. However, he grew careless about his dress. He wore a coat and jacket of a cut, which was in fashion at that time. Now Sir Roger was fifty-six years old but was quite hale and hearty. He had a house in village and town. He had such a good nature that people loved him. He also treated his servants well. He was also the justice of the quorum and showed his judicial abilities on thec hair of the justice at a quarter- session.

After this, Steele has described another companion of the club. He is a lawyer. He was also a bachelor. He was a man of sharp wit and clear understanding. He chose his occupation rather to obey the direction of his old father than to incline to his own tendencies. He took to the study of law in obedience to his father. He was more interested in the study of drama and dramatic criticism. The philosophers like Aristotle and Longinus were well understood by him. His father used to send to him various questions on law in order to ensure his son’s progress in legal studies. The son outwitted the father by getting them answered through a lawyer whom he had engaged for the purpose. No body took him as a fool but only his friends knew that he had a great wit. He liked to read the books, which were not of the age he lived. He was familiar with the writings, customs, actions and manners of ancient writers, which made him a keen observer of the worldly affairs. He was a good critic. His real hour of business was the time of the play. The presence of an able critic among the audience would rouse the actors to give the best performance possible.

Next the author has discussed about Sir Andrew Free port who was is a good businessman of London. He was very laborious, experienced and had a great understanding. His knowledge of commerce was extensive. He had his own ideals of the ways of enlarging a country’s trade. He was of the opinion that a dominion may be extended by art and industry than by power.Diligence or industry alone would help the country to gain things of permanent value, and sloth or idleness more than the sword had caused the ruin of many nations. He knew many short maxims. He had a unique art of speech.he was a self made person and believed that England too could become richer than other kingdoms, by methods which had so benefited him.

After Sir Andrew, the author has described the merits of Captain Sentry. He was very courageous intelligent and had good understanding. He was such a man who had not received good consideration of his abilities. He had been Captain in military for some years and fought bravely on fronts. He left the army because even though he rendered meritorious service, which any one could see and appreciate, promotion did not come to him. He used to say that only that man could hold a position in military who gets over his false modesty. He was of the opinion that it is cowardice to stand back modestly.Similarly a man who failed to assert himself and demand what was his due was a coward. He was frank in speaking about the weaknesses of his officers. This frankness was a part of his character. Though he commanded many persons in military, he was never haughty. He never became a flatterer,although he obeyed his superiors.

The author then talks about Will Honeycomb. Though he was old, there were no traces of the passage of time in his brain or in his person. He had an attractive personality and could impress women by his talk. He dressed well and was well acquainted with the history of every fashion that remained in vogue in England. Will Honeycomb was always interested in matters pertaining to women. In his conventions he talked mostly of women, their dresses, their manners and their fashions. He had a good knowledge of history. He could tell that the hairstyles or hats of our wives and daughters resemble to those of the wenches of French Kings. But the author says tha the was a gentleman. Leaving the relations of women he was an honest and worthy man.

At the end of the essay, the author tells us about one of his companions who seldom waited him. He was a philosopher and clergyman. He lived a sacred life. He was very weak in constitution. Because of ill health, he could not fulfill the responsibilities which promotion in the church might have brought him. He spoke on divine topic with authority. He wished for the good of the world even after his death.

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essay on social club

Soviet workers’ clubs in the 1920s

View of the principal façade of the Zuev Club, Moscow 1927 or later

The workers’ club

Anatole kopp town and revolution, 1917-1932  (1966).

. First, we must establish just what was meant by a “club” in the USSR of the twenties, a country in which the word had previously been applied only to private rooms reserved for the use of a group of nobles or wealthy bourgeois. A club was exactly the opposite of what is sometimes implied by a “club” today.

The important thing about a club is that the mass of the members must be directly involved. They must not approach it or be channeled into it from the outside as mere entertainment. They themselves must find in it the maximum of self-expression. The role of the club is to serve as a sort of school of culture…Within its walls workers of every age should be  able to find rest, relaxation, and a renewal of energy at the  end of the wor king day. There, outside the family, children, adolescents, adults, and the old should be made to feel members of a collectivity. Their interests should be expanded. The role of the club is to liberate men from the old oppression of church and state.

Originally, this new building, the expression of a new social function, was the response to a spontaneous demand, proof that it met a genuine need. Within a few months of the installation of the Soviet regime numerous clubs had been established. They were run by trade-union or political organizations, often by local groups, and set up in former private houses, in converted churches, in sheds, almost anywhere. In fact, the adaptation of these unlikely premises was one of the first tasks to confront the Soviet architects immediately following the revolution.

Zuev_Workers_Club_drawings

A center for creative activity and the diffusion of culture, the club was also some compensation for the discomfort and overcrowding that the workers suffered at home. Unable to provide apartments for all, the state tried to make up at the collective level for its deficiencies on the individual plane. But this was not all. Essentially, the club embodied a conception of culture that was no longer that of an elite but of the mass, no longer acquired in the silence of the study or in halls of learning, but in a group bound by common interests and an awareness of their need. It corresponded to a conception in which the home tended to become merely a place for the individual to rest, while life in all its social and cultural aspects developed in collective centers and collective forms, at a time when a craving for culture was beginning to seize the broad masses of the population:

We are living at a time when an immense cultural movement is developing among the working masses, the idea…of a new social and collective way of life is advancing with giant strides… Every worker [in our new industrial centers] is anxious to take an active part in both public and cultural life. The thirst for knowledge is enormous. The time has come for us to give the workers not only homes but buildings with facilities for meetings, study, recreation, reading, and the activities of various special groups [ kruzhok ]… …The idea of building palaces of labor or clubs is in the air…

Both in its architecture and in the facilities that it offered, the club, which El Lissitzky was to call a “social power plant”  [ soziales Kraftwerk ]  and “a workshop for the transformation of man,” evolved between the early years of the Soviet regime and the beginning of the thirties.

From 1917 to 1925 improvisation was the rule, not only because little was being built but also because the idea of a club was still fluid. The first projects were on a giant scale, among them, in 1923, the Vesnin brothers’ planned Palace of Labor , which was to be not only the meeting place of the General Assembly of the Soviets but also an enormous palace of culture where “the workers and peasants will find everything they need to broaden their horizon.” Intended, like all the unrealized projects of the early years, to serve the entire city of Moscow, it sought to achieve a propaganda effect by its very size.

essay on social club

However, it must be admitted that apart from the Palace of Labor (one of the important landmarks of the years of architectural renewal between 1920 and 1925 ), the other projects of the same period are peculiarly distressing. There is nothing in their outward appearance, nothing in their plan, to indicate the existence of a cultural life different from that supported by the old aristocratic circles or the provincial opera. The projects for workers’ palaces in Petrograd by I.A. Fomin and Beloborodov (1919) are no more than clumsy borrowings from the worst architecture of the past.

It was not until 1925 that the club first found both its true function and a style stripped of outmoded conventions. In accordance with the principle of decentralization and the accessibility of cultural facilities, it was to be designed either for a neighborhood or for factory workers at their place of work.

It was not until 1925 that the [workers’ club] first found both its true function and a style stripped of outmoded conventions. In accordance with the principle of decentralization and the accessibility of cultural facilities, it was to be designed either for a neighborhood or for factory workers at their place of work.

The true function of the workers’ club, forerunner of the  maisons de la culture of which there is so much talk in France today, first found expression in the early work of Konstantin Mel’nikov. If previous projects had borrowed heavily from aristocratic models or the opera, it was largely because neither a program nor the new forms yet existed, although the need was already there. But it was also because the mass of the people could not conceive that leisure, recreation, and intellectual development might be possible in surroundings that did not recall those of the privileged circles of the past; thus the first architects to design clubs had to fight against bad taste and the identification of new content with outdated forms.

The original clubs were to have rococo stages, boxes, orchestras, dress circles, and superfluous lobbies. They were visualized essentially as theaters where touring companies would go through their repertory before a passive audience. Later, more diversified functions began to appear and were progressively integrated into the plan, thus modifying the classical rules of composition and opening the way for new possibilities. At first, it was merely a matter of setting aside so many rooms for various activities as they developed, but the central element of the composition remained the theater whose archaic design became harder and harder to reconcile with its new functions. In fact, from being a simple place of assembly for the dispensation of culture the club grew into a complex whose members were themselves the creators, instructors, and moving spirits. The club became increasingly centered upon the idea of member participation. The stage was placed at the disposal of a variety of amateur groups rather than touring companies. This meant providing rehearsal rooms, modifying the capacity of the hall according to the size of the audience and the nature of the production, and (as in the avant-garde professional theater) tearing down the barrier between audience and actor by applying principles of theater design that owed nothing to the Italian models nor to the naturalist theater of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Thus the architect, faced with the problem of flexibility and adaptability, not only in relation to the theater itself but also in relation to the other rooms that together composed the club, was led to design spaces that could be isolated or combined in various ways depending on the schedule of activities.

essay on social club

The Zuev club, built on Lesnaia Street, Moscow, in 1928 by the architect Il’ia Golosov, is still in existence. Its theater, which was treated as a separate element and completely refurbished in 1966, is of little interest. The rest of the club, on the other hand, as I saw it bustling with activity one Sunday, remains a building of astonishing flexibility that users of different categories and ages can share without getting in one another’s way. Conceived as a series of intercommunicating spaces, overhanging galleries, and staircases whose landings offer choice observation points, it can still, without resorting to mechanical devices of any kind, be adapted to form a series of auditoriums of different sizes suitable for a variety of occasions.

Mel’nikov’s clubs are even more interesting. Originally, the club for the Kauchuk factory, like that for the communal workers, was equipped with highly ingenious moving partitions that could be used to enclose smaller or larger spaces as the situation required .

However, the cost of these buildings showed that this approach could only be an exceptional and experimental, never a general, solution. The OSA posed the real problem, namely, the standardization and industrialization of cultural facilities, particularly the clubs.

The year 1928 witnessed a mutation in cub architecture. In spite of all their innovations, the existing clubs, even the most modem such as those designed by Mel’nikov and Golosov, were sharply criticized for being centered on the stage and tied to the professional theater. A new series of projects, none of which was to be realized, was then worked out by teams of young architects fresh from school, among them Ivan Leonidov, who was responsible for , a revolution in the very nature of the club. This was partly attributable to the fact that 1928 was the first year of the five-year plan, which envisaged the construction of numerous industrial centers to be built from scratch on virgin land according to entirely new city-planning concepts. Many architects held the view that some of the cultural facilities should be accommodated inside the housing complexes themselves (“communal houses”). Thus the club or   palace of culture again became a somewhat exceptional element, to the extent that it provided a set of unique facilities that could not readily be mass-produced and that it tended to be located in a new city of limited size where the transportation problem had been solved and where the inhabitants could already be regarded as prototypes of the new man of the future.

Melnikov Rusakov workers club 1929

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Importance of School Clubs Essay Example

Have you ever joined any school activities? There are a wide range of activities including school sports, yearbook, student council, and clubs. Every schools website has all of the clubs listed on there, and says all of the options on the announcements. Most students don’t listen to that or participate, thinking joining is a waste of time, but in reality those extracurricular activities can do the opposite. By mandating students to participate in at least one extracurricular activity, they can build connections and long-lasting friendships, gain important life skills, and improve self-esteem.

First and foremost, students don’t just go to school for education, they go to make lifelong friends. In life, having friends that care for a child and can listen to their worries is important. Schools are filled with lots of  students, so it makes it easy to find friends with the same interests. Also, schools have a way to join those same students together… clubs. If a shy student is in the same group with other students who like the same things as them, it can help them come out of their shell. Ultimately, for students who aren't that outgoing and usually can’t make much friends, joining an extracurricular activity can make many ways to get them to talk to other people. 

In particular, school clubs help students acquire the skills they need for adulthood. Schools extracurricular activities are usually made up of a few members and a teacher, who know a lot about the topic and are easy to communicate with. Even better, skills that students can obtain from organizations and activities can be problem solving, communication/ social skills, confidence, respect, etc. As well, extracurricular activities most of the time aren't a grade, and are just meant to have fun and work on something members know alot about. So, learning important skills that help in adulthood, and having fun at the same time is a win win. Indefinitely, life skills can help students in social situations, and school organizations can help get ready for adulthood. Instead of children avoiding the work needed to achieve those skills, clubs make it much easier for students in the long run, by incorporating fun into learning.

Indeed, school activities can allow a child to pick anything they are interested in, and in addition, most schools have lots of clubs to choose from. Along with that, if a student picks a group that they know a lot about and enjoy, they could make new friends with the same interests that help open them up. Getting other students ideas can help them expand their learning, which can result in them becoming more confident in the group the student joined. Furthermore, working in groups can help a child communicate with other classmates, and help them grow their self-esteem because they know a great deal about the club they’re in. Moreover, a child can feel at home and confident with the people they are surrounded by, which can help them open up more and share their great ideas that nobody would think of before.

In conclusion, by mandating school clubs and activities, students can build friendships, learn important life-long skills, and improve their confidence. Most of schools extracurricular activities require students to lend a helping hand, either for the group to grow, or to pitch in ideas. Students can learn to do so much little things that can help how they think, act, and learn. The amount of clubs that are in school that students ignore is to a great extent, because they don't think about what they’ll gain from it. Making students participate in these school activities just already shows how important they really are.

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Home — Essay Samples — Entertainment — The Breakfast Club — The Issues of Social Inequality in “The Breakfast Club”

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ESSAY; Moscow's China Card

By William Safire

  • Sept. 8, 1986

essay on social club

Every decade or so, China undergoes a political convulsion. In 1948-49, the Communists threw out the Kuomintang; in 1956, Mao's ''Great Leap Forward'' plunged the country into a depression; in 1966, the Cultural Revolution to purify the party brought on a new Dark Ages; in 1976-78, we saw Mao's would-be radical successors, the ''Gang of Four,'' replaced by pragmatic Deng Xiaoping.

Now we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of the death of Mao, and some Pekingologists would have us believe that this decade's upheaval will not come.

Mr. Deng, at 82, has provided for his succession, we are assured: it's all set for Hu Yaobang and Zhao Ziyang to succeed him, with Hu Qili of the next generation right behind. Not to worry, goes the current Edgar Snow-job: China's new era of ''commutalism,'' communism with a capitalist face, will march undisturbed into the next millennium.

I wonder. Maybe the conventional wisdom will prove right for once. But for argument's sake, let's look at what is happening in China through a different set of glasses, seeking truth from facts.

Fact number one is that a wave of materialism is sweeping across the billion people of China. After a generation of repression, good ol' greed is back in the saddle, and an I'm-all right-Deng attitude permeates the new entrepreneurs.

As a longtime expositor of the virtue of greed in powering the engine of social progress, I cannot cluck-cluck at this. But there is a difference between the materialism of the Chinese on Taiwan, who are accustomed to free enterprise, and the lust for the good life of available goods on the mainland, where a terrible thirst has been a-building.

Let us assume that the outburst of materialism in China leads to some reaction: that some spoilsport faction emerges to summon up the ghost of Mao's ideological purity, and that this new gang of fortyish Outs finds its way back in. It is at least a possibility.

I think that shrewd old Deng is well aware of this possibility. That is why, despite his ostentatious rejection of personal cultdom, he is preparing his most dramatic assault on the memory of Mao. That father of the revolution startled the world by breaking with the Soviet Union; Mr. Deng, playing a revisionist Lenin to Mao's Marx, wants to startle the world and overwhelm internal opposition by a rapprochement with Moscow.

Accordingly, fact two: He has abandoned his demand that Russia move back its huge army from the Chinese border, thereby double-crossing his own Army leaders. He has forgotten his requirement that Soviet forces be withdrawn from Afghanistan, thereby double-crossing his Westernish ally, Pakistan.

All Mr. Deng now asks of the Russians is that they try to squeeze their Vietnamese clients to pull out of Cambodia. Of course they'll try - ''best efforts'' is an easy promise - and since the Vietnamese are notoriously independent, Moscow cannot be blamed for not succeeding. Result: Mr. Deng takes the salute from atop the wall in Red Square.

That reestablishes his Communist credentials, defanging hard-left opposition at home. And it is Middle Kingdom orthodoxy; I suspect Chinese agents in the U.S. supply the K.G.B. with intelligence, just as Peking permits our Big Ears on its soil to overhear Kremlin transmissions. Chinese policy has always been to play the barbarians against each other.

This theory would also explain fact three: Mr. Gorbachev's seizure of a U.S. newsman as hostage. It is no coincidence that this particular hostage selection follows China's arrest and expulsion of a reporter for a U.S. newspaper. The Soviet leader, advised by Anatoly Dobrynin, must have known that this slap in the face would jeopardize a summit - and went ahead with his calculated humiliation, similar to Mr. Nixon's mining of Haiphong harbor before his Moscow summit in 1972.

Because the Russians now have the prospect of a pilgrimage to Moscow by Mr. Deng, they can taunt the U.S. President with impunity. As Mr. Dobrynin probably predicted, Mr. Reagan is reduced to begging for the hostage's release, in effect volunteering testimony to a Soviet court, in his eagerness to crown his Presidency with a peacemaking summit.

Now Mr. Gorbachev can hang tough, holding a show trial and thereby delaying negotiations with the U.S. until the Deng visit - or can graciously accede to the Reagan plea, thereby establishing his dominance. And the overconfident Mr. Reagan never suspected, as he sat down to summit poker, that this time the China card was in his opponent's hand.

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    The club as a social force El Lissitzky Russia: An architecture for world revolution (1929). Buildings designed to serve all of society have always acted as a repository of the sum total of all creative energies. Depending on the prevalent social order, these have usually been of either a religious or a governmental character: the Church and ...

  14. Club Essay Examples

    Get your free examples of research papers and essays on Club here. Only the A-papers by top-of-the-class students. Learn from the best! ... In addition, whites were deemed to be the most popular club on the social media in 2015 leaving behind the other successful clubs with a large margin. The members of the Real Madrid are the owners of the ...

  15. Importance of School Clubs Essay Example

    In conclusion, by mandating school clubs and activities, students can build friendships, learn important life-long skills, and improve their confidence. Most of schools extracurricular activities require students to lend a helping hand, either for the group to grow, or to pitch in ideas. Students can learn to do so much little things that can ...

  16. The Social Club Analysis

    Improved Essays. 794 Words; 4 Pages; Open Document. Essay Sample Check Writing Quality. Show More. Previously on The Social Club the girls got an awful message from someone who was signed from someone believed to be Luke even though he was dead. The Girls visited the secret club that he went to and the name of this club was called The Social Club.

  17. Guest Essay: The Church is Not a Social Club by Nathan Koenig

    Never forget: The church is not a social club. Nathan Koenig is a recent graduate of Texas Christian University and a member of Atonement Lutheran Church in Metairie, Louisiana. He blogs at The Tin Can Conservative. In light of the decline in many American churches, I have noticed a troubling trend from our modern American zeitgeist.

  18. Soviet workers' clubs: lessons from the social condensers

    It looks at the complex phenomenon of the workers' club from a number of viewpoints. Starting with the idea of club as 'life itself', the paper examines it as an instrument of the Proletkult and traces this radically new typology, which aimed to become both a 'second home' and a 'church of a new cult'. It addresses the ideological ...

  19. Fight Club: Rebellion Against The Social and Cultural Constructs

    The novel is better than the film because the characterization of Tyler aligns with the central idea of identity crisis. In both the novel and the film version, Tyler portrays a character with strong ideologies; however, Tyler is much darker in the novel, while Tyler is more comical in the film.

  20. The Issues of Social Inequality in "The Breakfast Club"

    The Issues of Social Inequality in "The Breakfast Club". Categories: The Breakfast Club. Words: 1478 | Pages: 3 | 8 min read. Published: Jun 7, 2021. The movie Breakfast Club revolves around a group of five kids stuck in Saturday detention. Each one with their own unique personalities and unusual reasons for being in detention.

  21. Opinion

    See the article in its original context from September 8, 1986, Section A, Page 23 September 8, 1986, Section A, Page 23

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  23. Social Issues In The Fight Club

    Essay on Social Psychology in Fight Club. Fight Club is a complex movie in that the two main characters are just two sides of the same person. Edward Norton's character is the prototypical conformist consumer working a morally questionable office job to feed his obsession with material possessions. He works as a recall coordinator for a ...