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When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer

Series
Poetry with Simon Armitage
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Simon Armitage delivers his final lecture as Oxford Professor of Poetry, reflecting on his own influences as a poet.

Episode Information

Series
Poetry with Simon Armitage
People
Simon Armitage
Keywords
poetry. poet
literature
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 17/05/2019
Duration: 01:06:46

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Networked News, Racial Divides: How Power and Privilege Shape Public Discourse

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Sue Robinson, Professor of Journalism in UW-Madison’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, explores the relationship between race, power and privilege in American journalism, in this seminar.
She relates the account of her own journey as an academic and local journalist fostering trust with marginalised communities. How can we build bridges that enable journalists to amplify the message of those working for social change?

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Sue Robinson
Keywords
social justice
white privilege
community relations
trust
influencers
network map
local journalism
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 17/05/2019
Duration: 00:33:50

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Clement Attlee Memorial Lecture 2019

Series
University College
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Clement Attlee Memorial Lecture 2019, given by Lisa Nandy MP for Wigan

Episode Information

Series
University College
People
Lisa Nandy
Keywords
clement attlee memorial lecture 2019
Department: University College
Date Added: 17/05/2019
Duration: 00:39:26

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People's Landscapes: Creative Landscapes

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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A roundtable discussion exploring the ways in which writers, artists and musicians have both responded to and created conceptions of 'place' throughout history. Thursday 16th May 2019.
People's Landscapes: Beyond the Green and Pleasant Land is a lecture series convened by the University of Oxford's National Trust Partnership, which brings together experts and commentators from a range of institutions, professions and academic disciplines to explore people’s engagement with and impact upon land and landscape in the past, present and future.

The National Trust cares for 248,000 hectares of open space across England, Wales and Northern Ireland; landscapes which hold the voices and heritage of millions of people and track the dramatic social changes that occurred across our nations' past. In the year when Manchester remembers the 200th anniversary of the Peterloo massacre, the National Trust's 2019 People’s Landscapes programme is drawing out the stories of the places where people joined to challenge the social order and where they demonstrated the power of a group of people standing together in a shared place. Throughout this year the National Trust is asking people to look again, to see beyond the green and pleasant land, and to find the radical histories that lie, often hidden, beneath their feet.

At the second event in the series, Creative Landscapes, panellists explore the ways in which writers, artists and musicians have both responded to and created conceptions of 'place' throughout history, considering the role of taste, nostalgia and imaginary spaces in our understanding of landscape today.

Speakers:

Alice Purkiss, National Trust Partnership Lead, University of Oxford (Welcome)

Helen Antrobus, Contemporary Arts Programme Manager, National Trust (Introduction)

Grace Davies, National Public Programme Curator, National Trust (Chair)

Kate Stoddart, Independent Curator, Project Manager and Mentor

Dr Rosemary Shirley, Senior Lecturer Art Theory and Practice, Manchester Metropolitan University

Craig Oldham, Designer and Creative Consultant

Professor Fiona Stafford, Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Oxford

For more information about the People’s Landscapes Lecture Series and the National Trust Partnership at the University of Oxford please visit: www.torch.ox.ac.uk/national-trust-partnership

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Alice Purkiss
Helen Antrobus
Grace Davies
Kate Stoddart
Rosemary Shirley
Craig Oldham
Fiona Stafford
Keywords
history
Landscape
Environment
walking
art
design
creativity
taste
nostalgia
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 01:23:37

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Decay and closure of libraries - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (6)

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
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Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019 gives the sixth and final lecture in the 2019 Lyell series. Part of the series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy.
The histories of libraries in medieval England offer an insight into the intellectual and cultural life of the period. This should not obscure the fact that books made for individual use were more common than books for communal use. In these lectures, Professor Sharpe explains what evidence we have from medieval libraries; how our views of these may alter in the light of recent research; and the changing nature of libraries in medieval England.

Episode Information

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
Richard Sharpe
Keywords
history
Libraries
books
medieval
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration:

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Talking with the Soul: A Dialogue about Life and Death

Series
Ancient Egyptian Poetry
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In this Ancient Egyptian poem, a man talks with his own soul about whether it is better to live or die. Read by Barbara Ewing. Translated by Richard Bruce Parkinson.
The poem is known from a single copy, c. 1800 BC, whose beginning is lost. It is a dialogue between a man and his own soul, about the nature of death: the man despairs at life and longs for death, while his soul urges him to remember death’s horror. As they quarrel, life and death are interwoven, and the dialogue moves to a lyrical compromise. The poem ends as they agree to face life and death together.
An annotated translation is in The Tale of Sinuhe and Other Ancient Egyptian Poems 1940–1640 BC (Oxford World’s Classics 1998).
This recording is part of a study of Ancient Egyptian poems in performance (for the British Museum and Oxford University Ramesseum Papyri Project).
Our thanks to Chris Hollings, Adam McNaney, Karen Carey, Tim Reid and The Queen’s College, Oxford

Episode Information

Series
Ancient Egyptian Poetry
People
Barbara Ewing
Richard Parkinson
Keywords
sinuhe
ancient egypt
egyption poetry
ancient egyptian poems
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 00:15:38

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... from collisions to the Higgs boson

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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To study the Higgs boson at the LHC we also need to understand how highly energetic quarks and gluons interact, among themselves and with the Higgs.
These interactions are described by quantum field theory, a beautiful mathematical framework that combines quantum mechanics with Einstein’s theory of special relativity. In recent years, our understanding of quantum field theory has progressed significantly, allowing us to develop a new generation of accurate theoretical predictions for key LHC reactions. In this talk, I will highlight some of the ideas behind this progress, and illustrate how they are being applied to investigate the Higgs sector at the LHC.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Fabrizio Caola
Keywords
Physics
CERN
Higgs Boson
quarks
gluons
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 00:35:01

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From protons to collisions…

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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We learn about the Higgs Boson and its interactions at the LHC by examining the debris produced by colliding protons head-on at unprecedented high energies.
However, we know from our theory of strong interactions - quantum chromodynamics (QCD) - that protons themselves are highly complex bound states of more fundamental 'quarks', held together by the force carriers of QCD, the 'gluons'. The question is then: how do we go from the collision of these complicated protons to a theoretical prediction that we can use to test the properties of the Higgs boson itself? In this talk, I will discuss what we know about the proton, and how we apply this to LHC collisions and our understanding of the Higgs sector.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Lucian Harland-Lang
Keywords
Physics
CERN
Higgs Boson
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 00:36:13

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What the Large Hadron Collider is telling us about the Higgs sector and its new interactions

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Over the past two years, CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has started to directly probe a qualitatively new class of interactions, associated with the Higgs boson.
These interactions, called Yukawa interactions, are unlike any other interaction that we have probed at the quantum level before.
In particular, unlike the electromagnetic, weak and strong forces, they have an interaction strength that does not come in multiples of some underlying unit charge. Yukawa interactions are believed to be of fundamental importance to the world as we know it, hypothesised, for example, to be responsible for the stability of the proton, and so the universe and life as we know it.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Gavin Salam
Keywords
Physics
LHC
CERN
higgs
boson
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 00:44:51

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Episode 4: Survival Takes Time

Series
Staying Alive: Poetry and Crisis
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Interview with US poet Laura Sims, author of Staying Alive (2016) and Looker (2018)

Episode Information

Series
Staying Alive: Poetry and Crisis
People
Laura Sims
Adriana X Jacobs
Keywords
poetry
crisis
apocalypse
zombies
tv
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 16/05/2019
Duration: 00:28:04

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