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Freedom Behind Bars: Indira Gandhi's Emergency

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Public lecture by Professor Gyan Prakash (Princeton University) from 31 October 2018
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
Asian Studies Centre
People
Gyan Prakash
Keywords
South Asian Studies
Asian Studies centre
india
St Antony's College
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:57:34

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Love thy neighbour as you love thyself?

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Alenka Zupancic's lecture on 'Love thy neighbour as theyself' from 6 November 2018
Reference to Christianity and to Christian tradition is one of the key ingredients of the expanding right-wing identity politics in Europe (and more largely, in the West), including its more or less explicit nationalism and racism. The commandment to love your Neighbour as yourself obviously presents this politics with a problem and necessitates a (re)interpretation of its meaning. This lecture looks into some examples of this interpretational work, and into how it affects the figure of the Neighbour. At the same time, it will interrogate reasons for which Freud has found this commandment to be at the very core of what he called "discontent" (Unbehagen) in our "civilisation" (Kultur). What is this aggressiveness that tends to emerge together with the figure of the Neighbour, as inseparable from it? To answer this question, the lecture takes recourse to the (Lacanian) psychoanalysis – not in order to steer away from the political dimension of the question, but on the contrary to help us work our way back to its political dimension.
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
Asian Studies Centre
People
Alenka Zupancic
Keywords
Southasia; St Antony's; Asian Stdies Centre; TORCH
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:55:19

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Entropy from Entanglement

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Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Siddharth Parameswaran, Associate Professor, Physics Department.
The usual picture of entropy in statistical mechanics is that it quantifies our degree of ignorance about a system. Recent advances in cooling and trapping atoms allow the preparation of quantum systems with many interacting particles isolated from any external environment. Textbook discussions of entropy — that invoke the presence of a “large” environment that brings the system to thermal equilibrium at a fixed temperature --- cannot apply to such systems. Sid Parameswaran will explain how “entropy” of subsystems of such isolated quantum systems arises from quantum entanglement between different parts of the system, and how their approach to thermal equilibrium is best described as the `scrambling’ of quantum information as it is transferred to non-local degrees of freedom.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Siddharth Parameswaran
Keywords
Physics
theoretical physics
entropy
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:42:12

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Entropy: two short stories

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Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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John Chalker, Head of Theoretical Physics, gives a talk on entropy.
Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics give us two alternative ways of thinking about entropy: in terms of heat flow, or in terms of the number of micro-states available to a system. John Chalker will describe a physical setting to illustrate each of these. By applying thermodynamics in a realm far beyond its origins, we can use the notion of an ideal heat engine to find the temperature of a black hole. And by applying combinatorial mathematics to hydrogen bonding, we can find the entropy of ice.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
John Chalker
Keywords
Physics
theoretical physics
entropy
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:39:53

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Equity and quality of educationL Paradoxes from Hong Kong and Singapore

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
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An exploration of equity and quality of education in Hong Kong and Singapore.
The highest performing education systems across OECD countries exhibit both high quality and equity. Among them are Hong Kong and Singapore. Yet both systems report huge income disparities between rich and poor. How can educational equity and quality co-exist within a highly unequal society?
Employing Bourdieu’s logic of practice, I argue that cultural habitus and structural contexts account for this phenomenon. Paradoxically, structural reforms to increase equity and quality simultaneously exacerbate injustices and inequity. The cases of Hong Kong and Singapore may well resonate in other parts of the world.

Maria Manzon teaches in the Department of International Education and Lifelong Learning at the Education University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on comparative education history, theory and methods, and on parent engagement in Asia, using philosophical and sociological perspectives. Previously, she worked at the National Institute of Education in Singapore as research scientist. She was Chair of the Admissions and New Societies Standing Committee of the World Council of Comparative Education Societies (WCCES). Her 2011 book entitled Comparative Education: The Construction of a Field has been acclaimed for its comprehensive approach and path-breaking conceptualisation.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
People
Maria Manzon
Keywords
Equity
quality
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:53:33

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Entropy: Gaining Knowledge by Admitting Ignorance

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Alexander Schekochihin, Professor of Theoretical Physics, gives a talk on entropy.
When dealing with physical systems that contain many degrees of freedom, a researcher's most consequential realisation is of the enormous amount of detailed information about them that she does not have, and has no hope of obtaining. It turns out that this vast ignorance is not a curse but a blessing: by admitting ignorance and constructing a systematic way of making fair predictions about the system that rely only on the information that one has and on nothing else, one can get surprisingly far in describing the natural world. In an approach anticipated by Boltzmann and Gibbs and given mathematical foundation by Shannon, entropy emerges as a mathematical measure of our uncertainty about large systems and, paradoxically, a way to describe their likely behaviour—and even, some argue, the ultimate fate of the Universe. Alex Schekochihin will admit ignorance and attempt to impart some knowledge.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Alexander Schekochihin
Keywords
Physics
entropy
theoretical physics
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:52:31

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QUADcast episode 1: Careers - an interview with Jonathan Black, Director of the Careers Service.

Series
QUADcast
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In this episode, Richard and Tabitha visit Jonathan Black, Director of the Careers Service here at the University to talk about the benefits our alumni can still receive from the service.
Even after you've left the university, and to dispel some of the myths of choosing and changing your career.

Episode Information

Series
QUADcast
People
Jonathan Black
Keywords
alumni
oxford
Careers
job
news
Department: Alumni Office
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration: 00:20:31

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QUADcast

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QUADcast
QUADcast is a podcast aimed at alumni of Oxford University but it's for everyone, bringing you a monthly digest of news, views and interviews from across the institution. It's hosted by Richard Lofthouse (Lady Margaret Hall, 1990 and Editor of QUAD magazine) and Tabitha Whiting (Corpus Christi, 2012 and Alumni Social Media Manager).

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Science in Ten

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Science in Ten
Science is discovering things that have never been discovered before. It is one of the most exciting fields. There is so much science research going on out there, it is hard to keep track!
 Claire Hill, a PhD student at Oxford University, takes a new topic each month - summarises the science, outlines the debates and excites us about the future.
 What science has got you thinking? What topics would you like to learn more about? Send your suggestions to Claire and she will get podcasting!

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Royal Bank of Canada Foundation Lecture: Reading French in 15th-century England

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
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Julia Mattison (RBC Foundation-Bodleian Visiting Fellow at the Bodleian Libraries until 19 December 2018) gives a lecture on reading french in 15th century english.
Fifteenth-century English libraries and private collections have long been known to contain manuscripts in French. Studies of these French manuscripts have often emphasized contemporary acts of translation into English. Instead, this talk draws on manuscripts from the Bodleian’s collections, as well as medieval references to French books, in order to investigate how English readers and owners interacted with these objects. A close study of surviving French manuscripts reveals the reading habits of multilingual English readers and their understandings of the relationship between language and literature.

Episode Information

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
Julia Mattison
Keywords
history
reading
french literature
printing
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 03/12/2018
Duration:

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