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Live Event: Invalids on the Move

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities.
At a time when we are all locked down in our homes, Sally Shuttleworth and Erica Charters take a look, both serious and light-hearted, at the treatment of health and disease in the past, and particularly the period from the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries when invalids were actively encouraged to travel. The discussion will explore the creation of the health resort, and what life was like for invalids living in towns devoted to the sick. We will look at a range of diseases, both real and imagined, from tuberculosis and professional burnout to clergyman’s throat. We will also consider what happened in resorts when, in the 1880s, it was discovered that tuberculosis was infectious. How did hotels respond to the fact that invalids and non-invalids were happily eating and socializing together?

Chaired by Professor Philip Bullock, Academic TORCH Director, Professor of Russian Literature and Music at the University of Oxford, a fellow of Wadham College, Oxford.

Biographies:
Erica Charters
Erica Charters is Associate Professor in Global History and the History of Medicine at the University of Oxford, where she is also Director of Oxford’s Centre for Global History and the Oxford Centre for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology. Her research examines how war and disease intersect with state formation and state power, particularly in colonial contexts. Her monograph Disease, War, and the Imperial State: The Welfare of British Armed Forces during the Seven Years War (Chicago, 2014) was awarded the George Rosen Prize by the American Association for the History of Medicine, and the Templer Medal for Best First Book by the Society for Army Historical Research. To read more on Erica's research please click here or follow @EricaCharters.

Sally Shuttleworth
Sally Shuttleworth is Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. She works on the inter-relations of medicine, science and culture, and between 2014-19 ran the large ERC research project, ‘Diseases of Modern Life: Nineteenth-Century Perspectives’. Her most recent book is the co-authored Anxious Times: Medicine and Modernity in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2019).

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Sally Shuttleworth
Erica Charters
Philip Bullock
Keywords
history
diseases
Health
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 15/09/2020
Duration: 01:02:50

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Live Event: Could you be arrested for planting flowers in your street?

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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What guerrilla gardening reveals about our relationship with urban nature and culture.
Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities.

Dr Elizabeth Ewart, Head of the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography at the University of Oxford joins JC Niala, one of her doctoral students to discuss human relationships to nature in cities. Dr Ewart has an interest in the anthropology of everyday practices such as gardening. JC Niala's doctoral research focuses on urban gardeners in Oxford and she is interested in the what their everyday practice reveals about the way we live.Working with the case study of guerrilla gardeners who operate in cities such as London and Oxford they will explore the interactions between different types of gardeners that challenge commonly held assumptions about nature and culture.

Biographies:
JC Niala
JC is a doctoral researcher with an interest in how people’s imaginations of nature, affects the environment. With a focus on urban practice, she has worked on food sovereignty projects in Kenya . JC has used verbatim theatre as a tool for community engagement with both adaptation and mitigation strategies for dealing with climate change. JC's current ecological project 'Plant an orchestra' brings together her love of music and trees.

Elizabeth Ewart
Elizabeth Ewart is Associate Professor in the anthropology of Lowland South America. Her research is with indigenous people in Central Brazil where she has lived and worked with Panará people. She is interested in the material and visual aspects of Amerindian lived worlds, including body adornment, beadwork, garden design and village layout and is also interested in the anthropology of everyday practices, such as child rearing and gardening.

More recently, she has been developing research in southwestern Ethiopia (together with Dr Wolde Tadesse), on local agriculture and food production, specifically in relation to a local staple, enset (Ensete ventricosum or Abyssinian banana), exploring the manifold connections between cultivation, cooking, animal husbandry, land custodianship and sense of wellbeing among Gamo communities in the southern Ethiopian highlands.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
JC Niala
Elizabeth Ewart
Keywords
nature
urban gardening
culture
urban nature
anthropology.
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 15/09/2020
Duration: 01:01:57

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Did The Romans Recycle?

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Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology
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We all know the Romans liked wine, but what happened to all the smashed glass when the party was over? Dr Victoria Sainsbury tells the story of what the Romans did with all their broken glass, and why archaeologists care about recycling.

Episode Information

Series
Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology
People
Victoria Sainsbury
Keywords
archaeology
roman
anglo-saxon
england
Britain
recycling
chemistry
archaeological science
glass
Department: School of Archaeology
Date Added: 15/09/2020
Duration: 00:11:55

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Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology

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Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology
Researchers studying archaeological remains from across the whole range of the human past discus the sometimes surprising meanings they have found while digging through what we have left behind. From recycling Romans to voyaging Vikings, twisting Silk Roads to modern hunter-gathers of Borneo, let experts from the Oxford School of Archaeology take you on a journey to the past, which might just change how you travel into the future.

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The Leszek Kołakowski Lecture: Is Poland still a liberal democracy? Constitutional breakdown and potential revival

Series
Europe's Stories Project
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Wojciech Sadurski (University of Sydney and University of Warsaw), gives the 2019 Leszek Kołakowski Lecture.
The speed and depth of anti-democratic and illiberal transformations in Poland post-2015 took many observers by surprise; until then, Poland was regarded as an example of a successful transitional democracy. In his Lecture, based partly on his recently published book Poland’s Constitutional Breakdown (OUP 2019), Professor Sadurski will address the nature and causes of these changes, focusing on their anti-constitutional character. He will show how the ruling party has dismantled the major checks and balances of the Polish state, and subordinated the courts, the civil service and even the electoral system to the will of the party leader. The lecture will be organised around three main questions: What, exactly, has happened in Poland since 2015, and how it aligns with the worldwide democratic decay? Why did it happen, and what are Polish distinctive causes of the illiberal turn? And what are the prospects for restoration of rights-respecting constitutional democracy?

Episode Information

Series
Europe's Stories Project
People
Wojciech Sadurski
Keywords
politics
democracy
poland
europe
liberalism
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 08/09/2020
Duration: 01:06:38

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30 Years after the Velvet Revolutions of 1989: Time for a New Liberation?

Series
Europe's Stories Project
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In this lecture, Professor Timothy Garton Ash will explore the peculiar character of populism in post-communist Europe, and the considerable forces of resistance to it.
30 years ago, communist rule ended across central Europe in a dramatic series of events ranging from Solidarity's election triumph in Poland on 4 June 1989, through the ceremonial reburial of Imre Nagy in Budapest (with a fiery young student leader called Viktor Orbán demanding the withdrawal of all Soviet troops), to the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia. Timothy Garton Ash witnessed these events and described them memorably in his book The Magic Lantern: The Revolution of '89 Witnessed in Warsaw, Budapest, Prague and Berlin.

Now he has revisited all these countries, to explore the long term consequences of the revolutions and subsequent transitions. What went right? More pressingly: What went wrong? For today, Orbán is presiding over the systematic dismantling of democracy in Hungary, the Law and Justice party in Poland is trying to follow his example, the prime minister of the Czech Republic is an oligarch and former secret police informer, while a xenophobic populist party, the AfD, is flourishing in the former East Germany.

Episode Information

Series
Europe's Stories Project
People
Timothy Garton Ash
Keywords
europe
velvet revolution
communism
liberalism
capitalism
revolution
hungary
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 08/09/2020
Duration: 01:02:22

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Normalization, annexation, and the Palestinians

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
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Piotr Schulkes, Frederike Brockhoven, and Michael Memari discuss the impact of the normalization of the UAE-Israeli relationship on Netanyahu’s annexation plan, why it's yet more bad news for Palestinians, and American reticence to improve the situation.

Episode Information

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
People
Michael Memari
Frederike Brockhoven
Piotr Schulkes
Keywords
Israel
palestine
trump
Biden
Emirates
Annexation
america
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 08/09/2020
Duration: 00:42:26

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Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast

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Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
Almanac is a student-run initiative at the University of Oxford. Every two weeks, a number of students sit down for an in-depth discussion about the region which has made history for thousands of years and continues to make headlines today.

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Crowdsourcing conservation with Meredith Palmer

Series
Good Natured
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On this episode, Sofia and Julia talk to ecologist Meredith Palmer about the power of citizen science, the importance of inclusivity and some of the surprising discoveries her research has uncovered in the Serengeti.

Episode Information

Series
Good Natured
People
Meredith Palmer
Sofia Castello y Tickell
Julia Migne
Keywords
conservationoptimism
crowdsourcing
citizenscience
Department: Department of Zoology
Date Added: 07/09/2020
Duration: 00:24:58

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OxPeace 2020: Opening and keynote address on 'Feminine Peace, Human Security'

Series
Building Peace 2020
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Dr Liz Carmichael MBE opens the OxPeace 2020 Conference; Teohna Williams gives keynote on “Feminine Peace, Human Security”

Episode Information

Series
Building Peace 2020
People
Liz Carmichael
Teohna Williams
Keywords
human security
peace
women
Department: St John's College
Date Added: 06/09/2020
Duration: 00:16:43

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