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"Emptiness: Ways of Seeing" Conference 2021 - Roundtable 1: Emptiness, Space, Capital and the State

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
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Considering the contours of emptiness by examining the shifting relationships between people, place, capital and the state.
This roundtable will consider the contours of emptiness by examining the shifting relationships between people, place, capital, and the state. It will aim to combine macro-level analysis of how the presence or absence of capital and the state shapes lives with perspectives from the affected places by addressing the following questions: What are the limits and possibilities of the existing analytical tools for understanding abandonment of people and places? What, if anything, is new about today’s ‘emptying’ compared to other historical instances of abandonment? What do attempts to reconnect – for example, via desire for tourism or foreign investment – tell about the spatial configurations of contemporary capitalism? What could a perspective from the postsocialist context add to the analysis of space, capital, and the state? Is emptying a transitional moment, when afterlives of postsocialism are preventing commodification or is this a reflection of contemporary capitalism working via expulsion of space rather than expansion in space?

Moderators: Volodymyr Artiukh and Dace Dzenovska, University of Oxford
Participants:
Saskia Sassen, Columbia University
Johanna Bockman, George Mason University
Don Kalb, University of Bergen
Martin Demant Frederiksen, Aarhus University

Episode Information

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Volodymyr Artiukh
Dace Dzenovska
Saskia Sassen
Johanna Bockman
Don Kalb
Martin Demant Frederiksen
Keywords
emptiness
abandonment
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 05/10/2021
Duration: 01:31:55

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"Emptiness: Ways of Seeing" Conference 2021. Roundtable 2: On the Edge: Life along the Russia-China border

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
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A book discussion with Franck Billé and Caroline Humphrey
In this roundtable Franck Billé and Caroline Humphrey will introduce their forthcoming volume which examines the lifeways, politics, and history of the Russia-China border, one of the world’s least understood and most politically charged frontiers. Winding for 2,600 miles through rivers, swamps, and vast taiga forests, the border is a thin line of direct engagement, extraordinary contrasts, frequent tension, and occasional war between two of the world’s political giants. It separates two differing worlds. On the sparsely populated Russian side, defence is prioritized over the economy, leaving dilapidated villages slumbering amid the forests. The Chinese side is heavily settled and increasingly prosperous and dynamic. Moscow worries about the imbalance, and both governments discourage citizens from interacting. But as Billé and Humphrey show, the ordinary imperatives of daily life ensure cross-border connection endures, whatever distant authorities say. It is anticipated that discussion will consider such issues as: remoteness — relations between highly centralised metropoles and their peripheries; infrastructural atrophy — ‘anisotropic’ communication links and the conquest of distance; ‘closed’ zones of development — their privileges and those they exclude and leave behind; the move from sustainability to ruin and back again — perspectives on the ebb and flow of emptiness; the mixing of old tropes of security and secrecy with new rhetoric of state-sponsored development — how to disentangle this simultaneous dynamic of closed-ness and openness.

Moderator: Dominic Martin, University of Oxford
Participants:
Caroline Humphrey, University of Cambridge
Franck Billé, University of California, Berkeley
Madeleine Reeves, University of Manchester
Alessandro Rippa, LMU Munich
Natalia Ryzhova, Palacký University Olomouc

Episode Information

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Dominic Martin
Caroline Humphrey
Franck Billé
Madeleine Reeves
Allessandro Rippa
Natalia Ryzhova
Keywords
Russia
china
emptiness
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 05/10/2021
Duration: 01:50:50

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How Epidemics End

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How Epidemics End
The University of Oxford’s ‘How Epidemics End' project examines the ways in which epidemics have ended across previous eras and locations. Join researchers as they explain how they study epidemics and their endings.

The project 'How Epidemics End' is based at Oxford's Centre for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology and Oxford's Centre for Global History and is led by Dr Erica Charters. It is supported by the Wellcome Trust [grant number 204826/Z/16/Z] and by the University of Oxford's OUP John Fell Research Fund.

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5. Democracy | The Europe’s Stories Podcast

Series
Europe's Stories Project
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Today, we talk with Sophie Vériter and Josef Lolacher about the core of the European project - democracy.

How solid is this core? We talk about democratic backsliding, the perceived inefficiency of consensual regimes, and Europe in a changing world of populist and authoritarian tendencies. What can and should the EU do to defend this community of values? How much do most of us really understand about what the EU has achieved and the tools currently at its disposal? This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out www.europeanmoments.com/podcast.

 

Episode Information

Series
Europe's Stories Project
People
Sophie Vériter
Josef Lolacher
Ana Martins
Lucas Tse
Keywords
democracy
communication
institutions
trust
Young Europeans
european union
generations
Formative Moments.
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 05/10/2021
Duration:

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Becoming a field conservationist with Rachel Ashegbofe Ikemeh

Series
Good Natured
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In this episode, Sofia and Julia talk to conservationist Rachel Ashegbofe Ikemeh about conserving chimpanzees, the importance of mentorship, and also being a woman in the field.
A content warning for this episode, please note that we are discussing sexual harassment between 18.30 and 20 minutes so you can skip that part of the episode if you don't wish to listen to that discussion. The transcript for this episode is available here: https://conservationoptimism.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Transcript-S2-E04_Rachel-Ashegbofe-Ikemeh.pdf.

Episode Information

Series
Good Natured
People
Rachel Ashegbofe Ikemeh
Julia Migne
Sofia Castello y Tickell
Keywords
Field conservation
chimpanzees
Conservation Optimism
leadership
Department: Department of Zoology
Date Added: 04/10/2021
Duration: 00:33:56

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David Tibbs

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Recollecting Oxford Medicine: Oral Histories
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Derek Hockaday interviews David Tibbs, vascular surgeon, 7 February 2011.
Mostly recalling the creation of the John Radcliffe Hospital. Topics discussed include: (00:00:05) coming to the Radcliffe Infirmary in 1960, division over the Radcliffe and idea of new site; (00:02:37) Medical Staff Council, (00:03:49) early planning team for the new site, 1963, with John Oddie and John Badenoch; (00:09:35) looking for architects for the John Radcliffe hospital; (00:13:08) the order of building; (00:15:25) travelling to Scandinavia with architects; (00:19:09) Rosemary Rue, John Oddie; (00:21:37) talking through the first meeting of the planning team, Sep 1963; (00:27:14) reasons for and against the new site; (00:29:53) main move to the John Radcliffe in 1980-1981, disappointments and positives; (00:38:50) building of phase 2 of the John Radcliffe, interior arrangements and medical and unit facilities; (00:47:10) surgical view of George Pickering; (00:51:45) Judith Hockaday at the John Radcliffe. Note the following sections of audio are redacted: 00:10:26-00:10:33; 00:11:08-00:11:21; 00:25:35-00:27:14; 00:34:36-00:38:16; 00:49:22-00:51:22; 00:52:58-00:55:24 and 01:01:10-01:01:36.

Episode Information

Series
Recollecting Oxford Medicine: Oral Histories
People
David Tibbs
Derek Hockaday
Keywords
medical sciences; surgery
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 04/10/2021
Duration: 01:01:43

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Terence Ryan

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Recollecting Oxford Medicine: Oral Histories
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Susan Burge interviews Terence Ryan, consultant dermatologist and emeritus professor of dermatology, 18 November 2020.
Topics discussed include: (00:00:25) reasons for becoming a doctor, school days during Second World War; (00:03:10) coming to Oxford University; (00:04:20) entrance paper, first impressions of Oxford, Worcester College and medical school as a student; (00:07:05) clinical studies 1953, role as president of Osler House and Tingewick society pantomime; (00:08:47) house jobs, national service with Royal Army Medical Corps; (00:11:20) interest in dermatology; (00:13:21) dermatologist membership difficulties; (00:14:52) publishing papers early in career on blood vessels and growth of epidermis; (00:16:59) British Association for Dermatology; (00:18:03) vascular laboratory at St John's, London; returning to Oxford in 1971 as consultant; (00:20:11) Graham Weddell and leprosy patients and studies in Oxford; (00:23:04) links with the Radcliffe Infirmary, dermatology interaction with other medics and colleagues; (00:27:37) technicians in dermatology, the Slade Hospital and nurses, interest in the development of nurses in wound healing; (00:30:28) the importance of dermatology nursing, starting and developing the British Dermatology Nursing Group and International Skincare Nursing group, international work including Africa, Central America and China; (00:42:13) changes in Oxford hospitals through career, outpatient facilities at John Radcliffe compared to Radcliffe Infirmary and changes to dermatology department including surgery and facilities at the Slade Hospital; (00:47:19) colleagues in the department, support of Rosemary Rue; (00:49:30) relationships with infectious diseases department; (00:52:20) watercolour paintings, interest in Japanese paintings and buying and making décor for Oxford hospitals; (00:57:18) being contacted to organise St John's Ambulance presence at Winston Churchill's funeral; (01:00:54) continuation of international travel after retirement. Note the following section of audio is redacted: 00:17:08-00:17:14.

Episode Information

Series
Recollecting Oxford Medicine: Oral Histories
People
Terence Ryan
Susan Burge
Keywords
medical sciences
dermatology
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 30/09/2021
Duration: 01:01:49

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Some Sources of Romanticism: 1 – In Search of a Definition

Series
Isaiah Berlin
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The first of Isaiah Berlin's famous 1965 Mellon Lectures

In March–April 1965 Isaiah Berlin delivered his most famous series of public lectures, the A. W. Mellon Lectures (sponsored by the Bollingen Foundation), at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. The lectures were entitled 'Some Sources of Romanticism', and transcripts were published posthumously as 'The Roots of Romanticism', edited by Henry Hardy (London, 1999: Chatto and Windus; Princeton, 1999: Princeton University Press). A second edition was published by Princeton in 2013, with a new foreword by John Gray and an appendix containing contemporary letters about the lectures. In this first lecture he confronts the vexed question of whether there is actually such a thing as Romanticism (a label, some hold, on too many bottles), and if so, how it is to be described and defined. Towards the end there occurs a celebrated rhetorical tour de force in which he breathlessly lists the many, very various, characteristics that have been called Romantic by writers on the subject.

Episode Information

Series
Isaiah Berlin
People
Isaiah Berlin
Keywords
romanticism
enlightenment
history of ideas
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 30/09/2021
Duration: 00:51:00

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Capturing Genius: Editing Isaiah Berlin

Series
Isaiah Berlin
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Howard Burton talks to Henry Hardy, Fellow of Wolfson and author of ‘In Search of Isaiah Berlin: A Literary Adventure’, about being the principal editor of one of the twentieth century’s most captivating public intellectuals

This podcast for the Ideas Roadshow discusses some of the joys and frustrations of working with Isaiah Berlin on his texts for the last twenty-three years of Berlin's life.

Episode Information

Series
Isaiah Berlin
People
Henry Hardy
Howard Burton
Keywords
isaiah berlin
henry hardy
howard burton
ideas roadshow
editing
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 30/09/2021
Duration: 01:58:26

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Fantasy Creatures

Series
Fantasy Literature
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Dr Caroline Batten and Dr Megan Cavell discuss fantastic animals in fantasy text
Dr Caroline Batten and Dr Megan Cavell discuss fantastic animals in fantasy texts, from their classical origins to the modern day. Topics include medieval bestiaries, The Last Unicorn, dragons and their mothers, Donkey's romantic arc in Shrek, the queerness of Ursula the Sea Witch, and the monstrosity of gender.

Episode Information

Series
Fantasy Literature
People
Caroline Batten
Megan Cavell
Keywords
fantasy
bestiaries
Pliny
unicorns
The Last Unicorn
dragons
game of thrones
sirens
mermaids
The Little Mermaid
disney
gender
queer theory
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 29/09/2021
Duration: 00:57:36

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