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Virtual Reality News: the post-hype reality in 2019

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Zillah Watson, Commissioning Editor of the BBC's VR Hub discusses the potential for engaging news audiences through virtual reality

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Zillah Watson
Keywords
vr
virtual reality
news
media
reuters institute
Zillah Watson
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 22/11/2019
Duration: 00:46:01

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Rule-Mania in Enlightenment Paris

Series
Voltaire Foundation
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Professor Lorraine Daston delivers the 2019 Besterman Lecture

By the late seventeenth century, Western Europe’s metropolises were in competition with each other to straighten, illuminate, sanitize, broaden, and above all order their thoroughfares, granting the police enormous power. After the creation of the office of the Paris Lieutenant de Police in 1667, the Parisian police became the avant garde of the French absolutist bureaucracy, admired and feared throughout Europe. The sheer scope and detail of these regulations is staggering: they represent a heroic effort to anticipate, counter, and regulate every possible affront to public safety and good order. It is within this context that a new kind of rule emerges: the rule so certain of its universality, so confident of its foresight, that its enforcement excludes the possibility of adjustment to particular cases.

Episode Information

Series
Voltaire Foundation
People
Lorraine Daston
Keywords
besterman
paris
Department: Voltaire Foundation
Date Added: 21/11/2019
Duration:

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Pakistan women on the frontlines

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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Oscar-winning journalist, filmmaker and activist Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy delivers the Sarfraz Pakistan Lecture. The lecture is introduced by Sir Tim Hitchens, College President.
Pakistan, a deeply patriarchal society is rapidly changing and women are at the forefront. This lecture explores the ways in which women across the country are working on the grassroots level to create spheres of influence pushing back on archaic laws, age old practice and using the Internet to arm themselves to have a greater voice in society. This push against a power structure in a country where men make all the rules has led to a backlash against women with more voices calling for women to conform to traditional roles but this generation has dug its heels to fight back. As a filmmaker, Sharmeen, has documented this changing role over two decades. This lecture will use film and personal testimonies of the activists she has documented to demonstrate the rapidly shifting landscape.

Episode Information

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
Keywords
feminism
Pakistan
gender equality
human rights
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 21/11/2019
Duration: 00:51:09

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Spoken memoir of Professor Jon Stallworthy

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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A speech given by Sir Richard Sorabji at the launch party for the Jon Stallworthy Poetry Prize Campaign.

Episode Information

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Richard Sorabji
Keywords
poetry
biography
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 21/11/2019
Duration: 00:21:43

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Chineke! Championing Change and Celebrating Diversity in Classical Music

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Chineke! Founder Chi Chi Nwanoku OBE talks about her orchestra of majority BME musicians.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Chi Chi Nwanoku OBE
Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey
Keywords
music
clasical music
chineke!
bme
ethnicity
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 20/11/2019
Duration: 00:35:11

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Sensing the Sacred: The Materiality and Aurality of Religious Texts

Series
LIBcast - from The Queen's College
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Laetitia Pilgrim, a final year history student at Queen's, gives a talk to accompany her exhibition at The Queen's college.
The exhibition has been curated by an undergraduate, Laetitia Pilgrim, a final year history student. It invites a moment’s pause, using objects usually hidden within the shelves of the Special Collections Library of Queen’s to provoke some reflection on sense and sacredness. This exhibition invites the viewer to explore the delights and difficulties these senses have historically presented. It does so in the context of Christian religious texts. Religious believers have always been confronted with the problem of how to represent what is spiritual and sacred through material and sensual means.

This exhibition includes medieval illuminations, early-modern iconoclasm, printed texts, and modern art. Together, they show the variety of ways in which people have negotiated the problems presented by the materiality of religious texts over time. Music and texts in a variety of languages are also displayed, exploring how religious ideas have been communicated through different sounds.
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
LIBcast - from The Queen's College
People
Laetitia Pilgrim
Keywords
religion
history
books
christianity
sacred
Department: The Queen's College
Date Added: 20/11/2019
Duration: 00:32:37

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Yoav Ronel - 'Love, Zionism and Melancholy in the Prose of Micha Yosef Berdichevsky'

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Yoav Ronel (Bezalel and BGU) considers representations of a melancholic national and subjective desire in the prose of Micha Yosef Berdichevsky (1865-1921)
This talk deals with the representations of a melancholic national and subjective desire, in the prose of Micha Yosef Berdichevsky (1865-1921), one of the prominent figures of the revival period of modern Hebrew Literature. Berdichevsky – as critics have shown repeatedly – claimed that the national revival will come from the birth of a new, erotic, willful and vital subject: the young, in-love and “detached” (Talush) protagonist of many of his stories, who represents the fracture point of Jewish modernity and secularism at the end of the 19th century. Ronel suggests that erotic love and the desire for a national revival in Berdichevsky’s poetic work appear as experiences of a melancholic desire that does not exhaust itself because it has already lost its object. And that this desire is the hinge around which the new life of Berdichevsky’s work turns. The erotic and vital desire – both subjective and national – is built upon an inherent sadness and melancholy.
The revival period was characterized by a tension between the desire for the founding of sovereign Jewish nationality, and a deep doubt concerning the historical possibility of that project. Berdichevsky held a radical and anti-positivist position concerning the national-political debate: In his publicist and philosophical texts, the author repeatedly called for the need for Jewish sovereignty, and for the cultivation of a subjective and collective erotic will. Such calls stood against Berdichevsky’s disbelief in the possibility of such endeavour, and even in the survival of modern Jewish culture. Ronel argues that the melancholy found at the heart of his work is not opposed to the erotic and the national desire but preserves them. That is why Berdichevsky’s poetic and philosophical language does not distinguish between love and melancholy. Melancholy, Ronel thus argues, is not a biographical or psychological sadness and loss, but a poetic-political device. It is a mechanism for the suspension of subjective and national desire, and functions as the key to a renewed understanding of the author’s work and life.
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
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Yoav Ronnel
Keywords
zionism
melancholy
Israel
Berdichevsky
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 20/11/2019
Duration: 00:42:25

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Rethinking Work from A Uganda Marketplace

Series
African Studies Centre
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William Monteith explores the marketplaces of Uganda, specifically larger ones in Kampala, to discuss how the differences between waged and non-waged labour are viewed. He also discusses the role of different types of work in this context.
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
African Studies Centre
People
William Monteith
Keywords
work
wage
Uganda
labour
Department: Centre for African Studies
Date Added: 20/11/2019
Duration:

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Book at Lunchtime: India, Empire and First World War Culture

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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TORCH Book at Lunchtime event on India, Empire and First World War Culture by Professor Santanu Das. Held on 20th November 2019.
Based on ten years of research, Santanu Das's India, Empire, and First World War Culture: Writings, Images, and Songs recovers the sensuous experience of combatants, non-combatants and civilians from undivided India in the 1914-1918 conflict and their socio-cultural, visual, and literary worlds. Around 1.5 million Indians were recruited, of whom over a million served abroad. Das draws on a variety of fresh, unusual sources - objects, images, rumours, streetpamphlets, letters, diaries, sound-recordings, folksongs, testimonies, poetry, essays, and fiction - to produce the first cultural and literary history, moving from recruitment tactics in villages through sepoy traces and feelings in battlefields, hospitals, and POW camps to post-war reflections on Europe and empire. Combining archival excavation in different countries across several continents with investigative readings of Gandhi, Kipling, Iqbal, Naidu, Nazrul, Tagore, and Anand, this imaginative study opens up the worlds of sepoys and labourers, men and women, nationalists, artists, and intellectuals, trying to make sense of home and the world in times of war.

Panel commentators will include Dr Yasmin Khan, Professor Laura Marcus, and Professor Jay Winter.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Santanu Das
Yasmin Khan
Laura Marcus
Jay Winter
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
literature
india
war
first world war
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 20/11/2019
Duration: 00:47:07

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The First Image of a Black Hole

Series
Oxford Physics Public Lectures
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Professor Heino Falcke of Radboud University, Nijmegen delivers the 19th Hintze Lecture - reviewing the latest results of the Event Horizon Telescope, its scientific implications and future expansions of the array

One of the most bizarre, but perhaps also most fundamental predictions of Einstein’s theory of general relativity are black holes. They are extreme concentrations of matter with a gravitational attraction so strong, that not even light can escape. The inside of black holes is shielded from observations by an event horizon, a virtual one-way membrane through which matter, light and information can enter but never leave. This loss of information, however, contradicts some basic tenets of quantum physics. Does such an event horizon really exist? What are its effects on the ambient light and surrounding matter? How does a black hole really look? Can one see it? Indeed, recently we have made the first image of a black hole and detected its dark shadow in the radio galaxy M87 with the global Event Horizon Telescope experiment. Detailed supercomputer simulations faithfully reproduce these observations. Simulations and observations together provide strong support for the notion that we are literally looking into the abyss of the event horizon of a supermassive black hole. The talk will review the latest results of the Event Horizon Telescope, its scientific implications and future expansions of the array.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Physics Public Lectures
People
Heino Falcke
Keywords
event horizon
black holes
quantum physics
Telescope
milky way
space
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 19/11/2019
Duration:

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