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Fairies, Children and Changelings

Series
Modern Fairies
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Carolyne Larrington and Fay Hield talk about the strange interest that fairies take in human infants, and the plight of children who stumble into this world, and can’t get home.
We explore how fairies seem to have difficulty in giving birth, and they need humans midwives to help. One of the strangest medieval stories is that of the 'Green Children' who appear in the human world in twelfth-century Suffolk and can’t find their way home again. We also talk about changelings, the puny, wizened infants swapped by the fairies for healthy human children.

Episode Information

Series
Modern Fairies
People
Carolyne Larrington
Fay Hield
Brian McMahon
Marry Waterson
Ben Nicholls
Barney Morse-Brown.
Keywords
fairies
changelings
green children
babies
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 19/02/2019
Duration: 00:23:54

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Singing in the Age of Anxiety

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Laura will be joined an expert panel to discuss the book and its themes; Dr Benjamin Walton (Jesus, Cambridge), Professor Kate McLoughlin (Harris Manchester, Oxford). Chaired by Professor Philip R. Bullock (Wadham, Oxford).
In New York and London during World War I, the performance of lieder -German art songs- was roundly prohibited, representing as they did the music and language of the enemy. But as German musicians returned to the transatlantic circuit in the 1920s, so too did the songs of Franz Schubert, Hugo Wolf, and Richard Strauss. Lieder were encountered in a variety of venues and media-at luxury hotels and on ocean liners, in vaudeville productions and at Carnegie Hall, and on gramophone recordings, radio broadcasts, and films. Laura Tunbridge explores the renewed vitality of this refugee musical form between the world wars, offering a fresh perspective on a period that was pervaded by anxieties of displacement. Through richly varied case studies, Singing in the Age of Anxiety traces how lieder were circulated, presented, and consumed in metropolitan contexts, shedding new light on how music facilitated unlikely crossings of nationalist and internationalist ideologies during the interwar period.

Laura Tunbridge is Professor of Music and Henfrey Fellow and Tutor, St Catherine's College, at the University of Oxford. Editor of the Journal of the Royal Musical Association from 2013-2018, in 2017 she was elected to the Directorium of the International Musicological Society. Laura’s research has concentrated on German Romanticism, with a particular interest in reception through criticism, performance, and composition. Among her publications are the books Schumann’s Late Style (Cambridge, 2007) and The Song Cycle (Cambridge, 2010).
Laura will be joined an expert panel to discuss the book and its themes; Dr Benjamin Walton (Jesus, Cambridge), Professor Kate McLoughlin (Harris Manchester, Oxford). Chaired by Professor Philip R. Bullock (Wadham, Oxford)

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Laura Tunbridge
Kate McLoughlin
Philip Bullock
Benjamin Walton
Keywords
literature
music
leider
history
Germany
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 19/02/2019
Duration: 00:45:02

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Davos Doom and Gloom

Series
Future of Business
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This year's World Economic Forum was punctuated by an overall sense of pessimism and concern for the future. One attendee, Oxford Saïd Business School Dean Peter Tufano, gives his take on the state of business.
Tufano also discusses how business schools like his can better prepare students for leadership positions in a changing world.

Episode Information

Series
Future of Business
People
Peter Tufano
Keywords
Said Business School
Davos
world economic forum
business
corporations
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 19/02/2019
Duration: 00:23:17

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Cricket to clinic via the lab

Series
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
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Professor Giles Toogood talks about his background which combined sport and surgery, and discusses the advances in hepatobiliary.
Professor Giles Toogood is a Professor of Hepatobiliary Surgery at Leeds University.
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
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
People
Giles Toogood
Keywords
surgery
surgeons
surgical
Medicine
hepatobiliary surgery
clinic
lab
cricket
Department: Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences
Date Added: 19/02/2019
Duration: 00:52:08

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Diving Deep. Slow News and Reader Engagement

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Chris Cook of 'slow news' start-up Tortoise on providing an alternative to the 24/7 news cycle

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Chris Cook
Keywords
slow news
tortoise
journalism
media
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 18/02/2019
Duration: 00:13:45

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India's Social Media Elections

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Dr Vidya Narayanan of the Oxford Internet Institute on how India's 2019 general elections will be affected by the influence of social media

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Vidya Narayanan
Keywords
india
social media
OII
facebook
whatsapp
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 18/02/2019
Duration: 00:37:03

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The Origins of Enigma Codebreaking at Bletchley Park

Series
Kellogg College
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Sir Dermot Turing will talk about the origins of Enigma codebreaking at Bletchley Park, the Bombe machine and how it worked.
In 1939, six weeks before the outbreak of World War 2, the British codebreakers knew next to nothing about the German military Enigma machine. How was it that, by mid-autumn, they had already designed the Bombe machine which would win the codebreaking war?

Join us in the build up to our Bletchley Park Week series of events (3rd – 7th March 2019), for this fascinating talk by Sir Dermot Turing, author and nephew of the Bletchley Park cryptanalyst Alan Turing.

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
Sir Dermot Turing
Keywords
Bletchley Park
turing
codebreaking
computing
maths
war
world war 2
enigma
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 18/02/2019
Duration: 01:02:25

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Endowment, Enterprise and Emendation: The History of Egyptology at Queen's

Series
LIBcast - from The Queen's College
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Clare Lewis, UCL, gives a talk on endowment, enterprise and emendation and egyptology at Queen's College. With Richard Parkinson.

Episode Information

Series
LIBcast - from The Queen's College
People
Clare Lewis
Richard Parkinson
Keywords
egypt
egyptology
The Queen’s College
The Peet Library
Department: The Queen's College
Date Added: 18/02/2019
Duration: 00:32:59

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LIBcast - from The Queen's College

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LIBcast - from The Queen's College
This podcast series is for the curious mind. Take a closer look at the Queen’s College Library's impressive collection through its eclectic exhibitions. Each episode features the recording of a talk associated with the Library's latest exhibition.

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The politics of distribution in Ethiopia's 'developmental state'

Series
African Studies Centre
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ASC seminar by Tom Lavers

A growing literature highlights the pursuit of 'double-digit growth' and industrialisation within the Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Party's (EPRDF) 'developmental state' model. Yet economic transformation has never been the sole focus of the EPRDF's thinking. Rather, the distributional implications of development have been a central concern ever since the party came to power in 1991 and even beforehand during the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front's (TPLF) liberation struggle and administration of Tigray during the 1980s. This presentation is based on empirical research on land, agriculture, social protection and employment conducted over the past 10 years, involving analysis of key informant interviews with political elites and bureaucrats, official and internal party documentation, and village level case studies. The analysis shows that the EPRDF has long sought not only to stimulate a rapid process of economic transformation, but also to manage that process in the interests of social and political stability, drawing on a range of policy tools to do so, including: state land ownership, agricultural extension, employment creation and, more recently, social protection. Despite significant shifts in the EPRDF’s development strategy over time, there is actually considerable continuity in the principles underpinning this distributional strategy that reflects the complex interplay of political interests and ideology, namely: delivering tangible progress to a broad section of the population as a means of building support, while also mobilising along ethno-nationalist lines. Ironically, however, while this approach has secured many successes, it has also exposed important limitations, in highlighting two of the central drivers of recent political upheaval within the country: an interlinked crisis of severe land and employment shortages, and the limits to ethno-regional autonomy under the federal system.

Tom Lavers is a Lecturer in Politics and Development at the University of Manchester's Global Development Institute. His research focuses on state-society relations and the politics of development. Recent work has been published in journals such as African Affairs, Development and Change and the Journal of Agrarian Change.

Episode Information

Series
African Studies Centre
People
Tom Lavers
Keywords
Ethiopia
Africa
development
distribution
Federalism
ethnicity
oromo
Department: Centre for African Studies
Date Added: 16/02/2019
Duration:

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