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Eco-anxiety with Caroline Hickman

Series
Good Natured
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This week Sofia and Julia talk to climate psychologist Caroline Hickman about eco-anxiety, climate grief and the power of young climate activists.

Episode Information

Series
Good Natured
People
Caroline Hickman
Julia Migne
Sofia Castello y Tickell
Keywords
conservation
Environment
optimism
climate
eco-anxiety
activism
Department: Department of Zoology
Date Added: 02/06/2020
Duration:

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Looking forward to the next 100 years of the Osma Studentship

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
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Dr Mariam Rosser-Owen, Osma Student ‘99–00, head curator of the Arab World collections at the V&A, traces with a specialist eye the collection at the Instituto and her research there, followed by an expert roundtable on the future of the Studentship.
Dr Mariam Rosser-Owen, Osma Student ‘99–00, curates one of the most significant collections of Spanish Islamic art outside Spain, the Arab World collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and has published widely on the subject.

Of her time in Madrid she said, ‘It was a truly magical year and experience and I have clear memories of sitting in that wonderful library in the Instituto browsing books and archives, even objects! They just brought me the little 10th-century Cordoban ivory casket to study at my desk!’ ‘That was a truly special experience; literally touching the history I was studying […] You couldn’t get closer to the Omayad court’.

She curated an exhibition, held at the V&A and later at the Alhambra in Granada, on the influential nineteenth-century design theorist Owen Jones’s study of, and inspiration from, the Alhambra, of which Osma was the first president of the Board of Trustees.

She concluded her talk at the de Osma Centenary commemoration with the following remark: ‘I’m exceedingly grateful to have been a recipient of the de Osma Studentship. I think my career to date has shown that the experiences there twenty years ago were important, formative, and continue to bear fruit. And I hope the Studentship is able to continue for another 100 years and give many more students access to this fantastic collection and library, and the unique experiences that we have all benefited from. Thank you, don Guillermo.’

The centenary was crowned by a roundtable discussion on the future of the Osma Studentship at Oxford. Carole Souter, Master of St Cross College, former Chief Executive of the National Heritage Memorial Fund and Trustee of Historic Royal Palaces, was joined by Xenia Elsaesser, Osma Student 2009–2010 and cultural strategist based in Berlin, and Dr Miriam Alí de Unzaga, Osma Student 2000–2001 and 2001–2002, anthropologist currently working with the head curator of the Instituto, Cristina Partearroyo, on the publication of the Instituto’s textile collection.

The roundtable culminated in a heartfelt appeal to create an alumni network for the Osma Studentship, so that intergenerational connections can continue to proliferate.

Episode Information

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
People
Mariam Rosser-Owen
Carole Souter
Miriam Ali de Unzaga
Xenia Elsaesser
Keywords
osma centenary
spanish studies
osma studentship
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 02/06/2020
Duration: 00:41:54

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Osma Students from the past: The stories of British novelist Inez Pearn, first woman to hold the studentship ‘35–36, and Dr Alan Forey, Osma Student ‘56–57 and '57–58

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
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Simon Deefholts and Louisa Long, grand-daughter of Inez Pearn, talk about her time in Madrid before the Civil War as a source of inspiration for her novels. Dr Alan Forey, reader emeritus at the University of Durham, recalls his studentship in the 1950s.
Simon Deefholts, editor and translator, and his niece Louisa Long, grand-daughter of Inez Pearn, talk about her humble origins in Wales, Somerville College, and her time in Madrid before the Civil War as a source of inspiration for her novels. In her semi-autobiographical book Spanish Portrait she recounts her first visit to the Instituto in 1936: ‘Besides being a library, it was a museum. The building and everything in it had been left to an Institute for Research by the founder, a well-known scholar and collector. Letters of recommendation had preceded her from England and everything was prepared for her arrival. She was received with great ceremony.’

Dr Alan Forey, reader emeritus in history at the University of Durham, and author of several books on military orders in the Middle Ages, recalls his studentship in the 1950s. As Osma scholars are often connected, Forey mentions that the idea of studying the Templars for his doctorate was suggested to him by Anthony Luttrell, a previous de Osma Studentship holder who had been working on the Hospitallers in fourteenth-century Aragon.

As Forey himself acknowledged, the time spent in Madrid on the de Osma Studentship ‘set the pattern for the rest of my academic career.’ In fact, in his opening remarks at the de Osma Centenary, Bodley’s Librarian, Richard Ovenden, paid a special tribute to Forey, one of his former tutors at Durham, and admitted to having ‘a special reason to thank the de Osma Studentship because his [Forey’s] influence on me as a young student was transformative and really made it possible for me to envisage the career that I have been so fortunate to enjoy.’

Episode Information

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
People
Simon Deefholts
Alan Forey
Louisa Long
Keywords
osma centenary
spanish studies
osma studentship
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 02/06/2020
Duration: 00:43:23

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Stories of past de Osma Students and a journey through the Bodleian Archives exploring the history of the studentship

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
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Osma Student ‘93–94 Dr Bruce Taylor speaks on his experiences in Madrid and predecessors who have passed, and centenary-organiser Dr Marina Pérez de Arcos shares her archival research on the history of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford.
De Osma Student 1993-94 Dr Bruce Taylor, biographer of de Osma Student 1934–35 Prof Sir Peter Russell, speaks on his experiences in Madrid and de Osma Student predecessors who have passed: ‘All who went before me, all who came after me, and doubtless the legion yet to come, share a special bond of privilege doubtless product of the munificence of don Guillermo.’

The munificence of don Guillermo has not reached our times without its share of dangers along the way – during the Spanish Civil War, the collection held at the Instituto in Madrid was saved from destruction by a clause that allowed Oxford to claim and bring it under the protection of the British flag.

Centenary-organiser and Osma Student 2015–16 Dr Marina Pérez de Arcos shares her archival research of previously unseen Spanish and British archival material, including documents from the Instituto Valencia de Don Juan in Madrid, the Duke of Alba’s Liria Palace, the Archivo Histórico Nacional, the Archivo de Indias, and the Oxford University Archives and Special Collections at the Bodleian Library, on the history of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
People
Bruce Taylor
Marina Perez de Arcos
Keywords
osma centenary
spanish studies
osma studentship
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 02/06/2020
Duration: 00:42:30

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An archival apprenticeship experience and a biographical profile of Guillermo de Osma

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
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Introduced by Bodley’s Librarian Richard Ovenden, Prof Duncan Wheeler speaks on his experience as a studentship holder in 2009, and art historian Guillermo de Osma shares a biographical profile of his great-granduncle.
In his opening remarks at the de Osma Centenary, Bodley’s Librarian, Richard Ovenden, details the new agreement between the University of Oxford and the de Osma Foundation, of which this centenary is the first event. He also pays a special tribute to Osma Student 1956–57 and 1957–58 Dr Alan Forey, one of his former tutors at Durham, and admitted to having ‘a special reason to thank the de Osma Studentship because his [Forey’s] influence on me as a young student was transformative and really made it possible for me to envisage the career that I have been so fortunate to enjoy.’

Prof Duncan Wheeler, chair of Spanish at Leeds, speaks on his experience as a studentship holder in 2009, which allowed him to fund his first fieldwork on contemporary productions of Spanish Golden Age plays, expand his then limited knowledge of Spanish cities, develop an interest in the history of medieval Spain and learn how to do archival research. To use his own words, Wheeler learnt ‘to think outside the box’ when sourcing Spanish archival material, which has since proved extremely useful in his recent research on the cultural politics of the Spanish Transition. For him, the Studentship ‘was a great enabler’.

Great-grandnephew of the studentship founder, Guillermo de Osma is an art historian and 2016 winner of the prestigious Arte y Mecenazgo Prize for his near three decades-long career in the promotion of arts heritage and its links with the present. He beautifully recounts the family history and discusses Osma’s career in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and his orientation as an extraordinary art collector. Central to Osma’s collection and legacy was his wife Adela, a pioneer photographer and talented art curator.

Episode Information

Series
Centenary celebration of the first modern Spanish endowment at Oxford
People
Richard Ovenden
Duncan Wheeler
Guillermo de Osma
Keywords
osma centenary
spanish studies
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 02/06/2020
Duration: 01:15:01

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2020 Disability Lecture: #WhyDisabledPeopleDropOut

Series
The Disability Lectures
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Dr Kate West, a neurodivergent student-turned-academic, reflects on the neurotypical University.
To download a transcript of the 2020 Disability Lecture, use the following link(s):

Transcript - PDF version (download) https://media.podcasts.ox.ac.uk/admin/disability/2020-05-27_kate_west_annual_transcript.pdf

Episode Information

Series
The Disability Lectures
People
Kate West
Sarah Stephenson-Hunter
Louise Richardson
Catherine Walter
Tirion Hughes
Keywords
neurodivergence
neurotypical
autism
dyslexia
disability
higher education
accessibility
reasonable adjustments
disablism
neurodiversity
Department: University Administration and Services (UAS)
Date Added: 01/06/2020
Duration: 01:21:08

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Hegemonic Narratives

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Hegemonic Narratives
Memory politics worldwide is often shaped by the dynamics of relations and tensions between hegemonic narratives, counter-memories and silent communities at the global, national and local levels. Transnational advocacy movements, international agents and organisations influence the application of terminologies and frameworks in which global hegemonic narratives operate. State actors influence and shape hegemonic narratives, silence others or deny their existence in order to legitimise their incumbency and state/nation-building efforts. Local actors – from civil society groups to individuals – often counter top-down efforts of hegemonic narratives by the creation of their own narratives, memories or by silence. In post-conflict and conflict societies the relations between different groups and actors advocating hegemonic narratives becomes all the more acute and tense as the social and political fabric is eroded and in flux by the conflict-generated transformative changes.
​
How do we understand hegemonic narratives in post-war societies? What do we know about them? How can we conceptualise hegemonic narratives in research inquiry? What constitutes such narratives in societies emerging from conflicts or in the midst of conflict? What is their role in relation to other mnemonic practices such as silencing, forgetting, neglecting, amnesia, or denial? And if they are, in what way do they differ? This symposium seeks to discuss these and other questions using a large number of case studies that can speak to some aspects of memory politics and hegemonic narratives.

The key aims of this day-long symposium are to:
​
Discuss the dynamics of hegemonic narratives at local, national and global level with a special reference to post-conflict situations;
Examine the various roles of actors, agents and institutions in shaping, organising, influencing, challenging and transforming memories and key narratives in (post-)conflict societies;
Facilitate an interdisciplinarity discussion in memory and a cross-disciplinary debates about the roles of memory in post-war societies;
Theorise and conceptualise different types, approaches to studies of memory, silence, forgetting and remembering;
Discuss the various roles of victims, perpetrators and new conflict-engendered communities.

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Past the Peak of the Coronavirus Pandemic: Triage of Non-Covid-19 patients

Series
Thinking Out Loud: leading philosophers discuss topical global issues
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Katrien Devolder interviews Dominic Wilkinson.
Some countries are now past the peak of the coronavirus pandemic, and new ethical issues are arising: the healthcare system continues to be under enormous pressure: because of safety measures, it works much less efficiently than before, there will continue to be Covid-19 patients, and there is an enormous backlog of patients whose treatments have been put on hold. Who should now get treatment first, and who will have to wait? OUCs Dominic Wilkinson, Professor of Medical Ethics and Consultant in Newborn Intensive Care, sheds some light on this important and extremely urgent ethical question, and proposes a practical solution.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Thinking Out Loud: leading philosophers discuss topical global issues
People
Dominic Wilkinson
Katrien Devolder
Keywords
Covid-19
pandemic ethics
resource allocation
prioritising healthcase
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 01/06/2020
Duration: 00:13:05

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Diversity in the arts: why languages need to be part of the conversation

Series
Linguamania
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Many languages and dialects spoken in British homes rarely make it onto the stage. In this episode of LinguaMania, we explore why linguistic diversity in the arts matters.
We speak to Professor Philip Bullock about multilingualism in different music genres and playwright and producer Mojisola Adebayo about the representation of different black voices in British theatre. We also hear from Ashlee Elizabeth-Lolo about her play Between the Rocks, and from Dr Noah Birksted-Breen about his experience of translating a Russian play into British hip-hop with artists Lady Sanity and Stanza Divan.

Episode Information

Series
Linguamania
People
Rajinder Dudrah
Mojisola Adebayo
Philip Bullock
Ashlee Elizabeth-Lolo
Noah Birksted-Breen
Keywords
languages
theatre
drama
multilingualism
diversity
stage
arts
performance
music
opera
creativity
Creative Multilingualism
Department: Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages
Date Added: 29/05/2020
Duration: 00:26:50

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Three little birds

Series
Back Garden Biology
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Blue and great tits commonly use nest-boxes in gardens. In this episode we explore their nesting behaviour and get a priviledged view inside the nest-boxes at Wytham Woods.
We explore what determines the number of eggs that they lay and ask whether could they lay more.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Back Garden Biology
People
Lindsay Turnbull
Keywords
blue tit
Great Tit
nesting
clutch size
sparrowhawk
Department: Department of Plant Sciences
Date Added: 29/05/2020
Duration: 00:16:18

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