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Is obesity a choice?

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
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Giles Yeo from the University of Cambridge gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 30 January 2020

Episode Information

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
People
Giles Yeo
Keywords
society
anthropology
diet
obesity
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 25/02/2021
Duration: 00:50:02

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Height, weight and prostate cancer

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
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Aurora Perez-Cornago (University of Oxford) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 23 January 2020

Episode Information

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
People
Aurora Perez-Cornago
Keywords
anthropology
society
cancer
Health
biology
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 25/02/2021
Duration: 00:35:16

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Coffee, pure and simple: Rejection of milk and sugar by Brazilian specialty coffee consumers

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
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Sabine Parrish (from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar on 6 February 2020

Episode Information

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
People
Sabine Parrish
Keywords
society
ecology
coffee
diet
brazil
anthropology
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 25/02/2021
Duration: 00:51:48

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An eco-bio-socio-political approach to anaemia in Peru

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
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Doreen Montag (Queen Mary College London) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar on 13 February 2020

Episode Information

Series
Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity (UBVO) seminars
People
Doreen Montag
Keywords
diet
society
anthropology
obesity
anaemia
peru
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 25/02/2021
Duration: 00:38:31

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The Intimate State: Teachers as Fault Line Between Repression and Revolution

Series
African Studies Centre
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In this seminar we hosted Jennifer Riggan as she gave a lecture entitled: The Intimate State: Teachers as Fault Line Between Repression and Revolution

Episode Information

Series
African Studies Centre
People
Jennifer Riggan
Keywords
teachers
Africa
Department: Centre for African Studies
Date Added: 24/02/2021
Duration:

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February 2021 with special guest Dr Rachna Begh

Series
Let's talk e-cigarettes
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Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson discuss emerging evidence in e-cigarette research and interview Dr Rachna Begh.
This podcast is a companion to the electronic cigarettes Cochrane living systematic review and shares the evidence from the monthly searches. In this episode Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson interview Dr Rachna Begh about the findings from her ongoing UK Management of Smoking in Primary Care, MaSC, study. This randomised controlled study explores the feasibility, acceptability effectiveness of general practitioner and nurse promotion of e-cigarettes versus standard care for smoking reduction and abstinence in people who smoke and who have smoking-related chronic diseases who are unwilling to stop smoking.

Episode Information

Series
Let's talk e-cigarettes
People
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce
Nicola Lindson
Rachna Begh
Keywords
Medicine
smoking
E-cigarettes
Health
Department: Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine
Date Added: 24/02/2021
Duration: 00:22:59

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Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Maja Gildin Zuckerman: The Pragmatism of Proto-Zionism: Tracing Jewish Nation-building through a Cultural Sociological Framework

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Maya Gildin Zuckerman discusses a 1897 tour from London to Palestine as a moment in the Zionist meaning making process.
Zionist emergence and its early developments have often been told either as a person/organisation-centred narrative or a Herderian cultural-geographically distinct account (see Dubnov 2011). Through the empirical case study of Danish Zionist emergence, I will show Zionism as an entangled and networked phenomenon that forced the involved parts to rethink Jewish belonging as either here or there. In the lecture, I unfold how a proto-Zionist tour from London to Palestine and back in 1897 inspired the participants, among which was the Danish-Jewish physician, Louis Frænkel, to discover and make sense of what Zionism meant to them. Based on a cultural sociological framework, I show how this proto-Zionist trip became a catalyst for re-coding Jewish values for a group of European Jews. They subsequently returned to their different nation-states and local Jewish communities with a repertoire of new ways of enacting Jewish collectivity that, among other things, reshuffled the earlier marginalisation of small Jewish communities such as the Danish.



Maja Gildin Zuckerman is Assistant Professor in the Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy at Copenhagen Business School. She was the Jim Joseph Postdoctoral Fellow at Education and Jewish Studies at Stanford University. Her research centers around questions related to modern and contemporary Jewish citizenship, the civil sphere, and national in/exclusion relations. She has co-edited the book New Perspectives on Jewish Cultural History: Boundaries, Experiences, and Sense-Making (New York, Routledge, 2019). She holds a PhD from University of Southern Denmark in Middle Eastern Studies (2016), a MA in Sociology and Anthropology from Tel Aviv University (2012), and a BA in Anthropology and Jewish Studies from Copenhagen and Haifa University.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Maja Gilding Zuckerman
Keywords
zionism
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 23/02/2021
Duration: 01:18:34

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Mainstream

Series
Worcester College
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Nathan Evans (1993) explores the anthology Mainstream
Nathan Evans (1993, Fine Art) explores the anthology Mainstream, which features his first short story in print, and which he has also edited alongside Justin David.

Episode Information

Series
Worcester College
People
Nathan Evans
Keywords
worcester college
Department: Worcester College
Date Added: 23/02/2021
Duration: 00:05:59

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Iraq and Lebanon – Revolt Against Sectarianism?

Series
Middle East Centre
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Maha Yahya (PhD, Director, Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Centre) Maysoon Pachachi (Film director) give a talk for the Middle East Studies Centre. Chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan (St. Antony's College, Oxford).
Iraq and Lebanon: When the Arab world rose up against failed governance in 2011, Lebanon and Iraq stood out as exceptions to the regional trend. Yet by the end of the decade, massed popular demonstrations would demand the fall of the regime in both countries. With their electoral systems, the Iraqis and Lebanese did not confront deeply entrenched dictators. Rather, protestors rose against sectarian politics and called for a new order based on citizenship without reference to religion.

Speaker biographies:

Maha Yahya is director of the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center, where her work focuses broadly on political violence and identity politics, pluralism, development and social justice after the Arab uprisings, the challenges of citizenship, and the political and socio-economic implications of the migration/refugee crisis.

Prior to joining Carnegie, Yahya led work on Participatory Development and Social Justice at the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (UN-ESCWA). She was previously regional adviser on social and urban policies at UN-ESCWA and spearheaded strategic and inter-sectoral initiatives and policies in the Office of the Executive Secretary which addressed the challenges of democratic transitions in the Arab world. Yahya has also worked with the United Nations Development Program in Lebanon, where she was the director and principal author of The National Human Development Report 2008–2009: Toward a Citizen’s State. She was also the founder and editor of the MIT Electronic Journal of Middle East Studies.

Yahya has worked with international organizations and in the private sector as a consultant on projects related to socioeconomic policy analysis, development policies, cultural heritage, poverty reduction, housing and community development, and postconflict reconstruction in various countries including Lebanon, Pakistan, Oman, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. She has served on a number of advisory boards including the MIT Enterprise Forum of the Pan Arab Region and the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies.

Yahya is the author of numerous publications, including most recently Unheard Voices: What Syrian Refugees Need to Return Home (April 2018); The Summer of Our Discontent: Sects and Citizens in Lebanon and Iraq (June 2017); Great Expectations in Tunisia (March 2016); Refugees and the Making of an Arab Regional Disorder (November 2015); Towards Integrated Social Development Policies: A Conceptual Analysis (UN-ESCWA, 2004), co-editor of Secular Publicities: Visual practices and the Transformation of National Publics in the Middle East and South Asia (University of Michigan Press, 2010) and co-author of Promises of Spring: Citizenship and Civic Engagement in Democratic Transitions (UN-ESCWA, 2013).

MAYSOON PACHACHI is a London-based filmmaker of Iraqi origin, who was educated in Iraq, the USA and the UK. She studied Philosophy at University College London (BA Hons) and Filmmaking at the London Film School (MA) and worked for many years as a documentary film, TV drama and feature film editor in the UK. Since 1994 she has worked as an independent documentary film director and has just completed a fiction feature film, ‘Our River…Our Sky’ (Arabic title: Kulshi Makoo), which was shot in Iraq in 2019. The project was awarded the IWC Gulf Filmmaker Award for the script, at the Dubai International Film Festival in December 2012. Maysoon has also taught film directing and editing in Britain and Palestine (Jerusalem, Gaza and Ramallah). In 2004, with Londonbased Iraqi director and cameraman, Kasim Abid, she co-founded INDEPENDENT FILM & TELEVISION COLLEGE, a free-of-charge film-training centre in Baghdad, which ran for 10 years and whose students produced 18 short documentary films, which were shown internationally and received 14 festival prizes. Documentary Films VOICES FROM GAZA (52 mins) Channel 4 (UK) 1990 (producer/editor) Red Ribbon Award, American Film and Video Festival, San Francisco IRAQI WOMEN - VOICES FROM EXILE (52 mins) Channel 4 (UK) 1994 (director/producer) A broad range of Iraqi women, of different ages, religions and political backgrounds, living in London recount their experiences – creating a sense of the modern history of Iraq as experienced by the country’s women. SMOKE 1997 (director/producer/editor) Part of an art installation by prize-winning artist, UK/Brazilian artist Lucia Nogueira. The film is now in the permanent collection of the Tate Modern Gallery, London IRANIAN JOURNEY (83 mins) ZDF/Arte 2000 (director) (First Prize, Kalamata International Documentary Festival, 2000) A documentary road-movie about a 24-hour bus trip with the only woman longdistance bus driver in the Islamic world. LIVING WITH THE PAST: People and Monuments in Medieval Cairo, (52 mins) ECHO Productions (USA) 2001 (director) A portrait of Cairo’s Darb Al Ahmar, a neighborhood in the heart of the old city facing a process of radical change. BITTER WATER, (76 mins) (Legend Productions/Oxymoron Films) 2003 (co-director/producer) Feature-length documentary about 4 generations of refugees in a Palestinian camp in Beirut. RETURN TO THE LAND OF WONDERS (88 mins) 2004 ZDF/Arte (director/producer/camera/editor) Made in 2004 on the first trip back to Baghdad in more than 35 years. OUR FEELINGS TOOK THE PICTURES OPEN SHUTTERS IRAQ (102 mins) (2008) (director/producer/camera/editor) (Jury Special Mention, Arab Film Festival Rotterdam, 2009) 12 women and a 6 year-old girl, travel to Damascus from 5 cities in Iraq. They live together for a month, during which they tell their life stories and learn to take photographs. The remarkable photo-stories they produced about their lives at a difficult and dangerous time in Iraq, were exhibited internationally and were also the subject of a book.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Maha Yahya
Maysoon Pachachi
Eugene Rogan
Keywords
middle east
iraq
lebanon
religion
politics
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 23/02/2021
Duration: 01:04:00

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History, politics, and Anecdotes with Eugene Rogan

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
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Piotr Schulkes and Eugene Rogan discuss the importance of history in contemporary Middle Eastern politics, how the West discusses the region, and a number of stories from Rogan’s time at Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
People
Piotr Schulkes
Eugene Rogan
Keywords
history
china
iran
middle east
Israel
Beirut
lebanon
Biden
trump
oxford
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 22/02/2021
Duration: 00:54:34

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