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Nihilism in the 21st Century: A Conversation with Pankaj Mishra, Shruti Kapila and David Priestland

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Pankaj Mishra, Shruti Kapila and David Priestland speak at St Antony's College on 3 May 2017
Shruti Kapila lectures at the Faculty of History and is a Fellow and Director of Studies in History at Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge. Her publications include a co-edited special issue ‘Bhagavad Gita and Modern Thought,’ Modern Intellectual History (2010), and, as editor, An Intellectual History for India (2010).

Pankaj Mishra’s From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia became the first book by a non-Western writer to win Germany’s prestigious Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding. Mishra regular contributes literary and political essays to the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, The Guardian, the New Yorker, London Review of Books and Bloomberg View.

David Priestland is Professor of Modern History at St Edmund Hall. His landmark overview of world communism, The Red Flag: Communism and the Making of the Modern World, was published in 2010. His following book, Merchant, Soldier, Sage: A New History of Power (2012), discussed the rise of market cultures in global history. He is now working on the history of market liberalism with special reference to the former communist world.
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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
Pankaj Mishra
Shruti Kapila
David Priestland
Keywords
nihilism
political philosophy
india
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 01:20:03

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An Eminent Victorian: Gandhi and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy in the 19th Century

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Dilip M. Menon speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 25 April 2017
Gandhi’s lauded text Hind Swaraj is born of and located within the 19th century crisis of liberal democracy and its resolutions of an intimate animosity towards the masses. Gandhi shares considerable terrain with Indian liberals writing in the late 19th and early 20th century; the text can be seen as articulating a certain kind of conservatism that attempts to think with “recovering liberties” that Christopher Bayly charts in all its nuances of a global historicism, statistical liberalism and a benign sociology. While Gandhi draws upon this burgeoning corpus of liberal thought in India, his work is characterized by its typical impatience with ideas, and a method that combines random observation with apodictic statements. The Hind Swaraj resisted many of the impulses of Indian liberalism, even when thinking from within it, in its attempt to forge a politics of indigeneity.

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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
Dilip M. Menon
Keywords
india
gandhi
Liberal Democracy
British empire
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:40:54

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The Unmaking of an Imperial Army: The Indian Army in World War II

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Tarak Barkawi speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 7 March 2017
The shock of repeated defeats, massive expansion, and the pressures of operations on multiple fronts transformed the Indian Army in World War II. It had to commission ever greater numbers of Indians as officers. Recruitment of other ranks reached beyond the favoured Martial Races. In the field, officers bent and then broke the rigid ethnic rules around which the army was organized, in small and large ways. The right rations, the right type of recruit, the officer knowledgeable in specific languages or religions, were not always available. Nonetheless, the army managed to recover, reform, and go on to victory. Colonial knowledge and the official Orientalism so evident in the ethnic structuring of the army was less relevant to managing the army at war. In large measure, Indian soldiers fought the Japanese led by a combination of emergency-commissioned nationalists (the new Indian officers) and British officers who were new to India and did not speak their soldiers’ language. The reasons why the Indian Army fought effectively for their colonial rulers were not to be found in stereotypes of Martial Races or South Asian warrior values.

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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Tarak Barkawi
Keywords
Indian army
Birtish empire
india
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:50:37

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The Militarisation of the Chinese Citizen: the Impact of Japan

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Christopher Hughes speaks at the China Centre on 3 March 2017
This presentation discusses how militarism was used to subordinate the modern idea of citizenship to social and political hierarchy in the transition from late Qing to early Republican China. The role of Japanese militarism in this process is analysed and evidence is drawn from a combination of elite politics and education policy and materials from China and Japan. The implications of this process for Chinese politics today are also explored.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Christopher Hughes
Keywords
china
japan
militarism
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:48:51

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An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Shashi Tharoor speaks at St Antony's College on 1 March 2017
Notable both as a politician and a writer, Shashi Tharoor is currently serving his second term as Lok Sabha MP and as the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs. Over the years he has held multiple roles including serving as Under-Secretary General of the United Nations under Kofi Annan’s leadership.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Shashi Tharoor
Keywords
india
Colonialism
British empire
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:31:25

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How do you mend a broken heart?

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
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In this episode of the Oxford Sparks Big Questions podcast we visited Cardiovascular Biologist, Nicola Smart, from the department of physiology, anatomy and genetics to ask: How do you mend a broken heart?
lub-dub, lub-dub, lub-dub is the sound of your heart beating in your chest. This is how we know we are alive. But what happens if it stops? Of course, if there's doctors and nurses around they can get it started again - but does this mean your heart is truly fixed?

In this episode of the Oxford Sparks Big Questions podcast we visited Cardiovascular Biologist, Nicola Smart, from the department of physiology, anatomy and genetics to ask: How do you mend a broken heart?
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Episode Information

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
People
Nicola Smart
Keywords
heart
surgery
heart attack
Health
Department: Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences (MPLS)
Date Added: 23/03/2018
Duration: 00:13:15

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Janet Smart, Reader in Operations Management, Said Business School

Series
5 Minutes with...
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Janet Smart chats with Steve, talking technology for 5 minutes about using videos. 'The beauty of the video is that you see the dynamics, you see things moving - you can never capture that in prose.'

Episode Information

Series
5 Minutes with...
People
Janet Smart
Steve Burholt
Keywords
videos
students
University of Oxford
Operations Management
Said Business School
teaching
edtech
learning technologies
Department: IT Services
Date Added: 21/03/2018
Duration: 00:05:00

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Defence Cooperation in Europe: Driving Forces and New Formats

Series
Changing Character of War
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Dr Matlary discusses the driving forces behind defence cooperation, the key players and cooperatives within Europe, as well as Russia’s effect on defence policy.
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Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Janne Haaland Matlary
Keywords
defence
co-operation
europe
Russia
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 21/03/2018
Duration:

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The King of Whoppers and political factchecking in the 2016 US presidential race

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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The Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series. Lucas Graves (Senior Research Fellow, Reuters Institute, Oxford University) delivers a lecture for the Business and Practice of Journalism seminar series.
Some videos have been edited out of the recording due to Copyright and-or distorted sound.
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Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Lucas Graves
Keywords
reuters
journalism
politics
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 21/03/2018
Duration: 00:37:31

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International Women's Day 2018: Women in the workplace

Series
Kellogg College
Embed
Baroness Hayto and Betty Webb talk about gender parity in the workplace, sharing their own experiences and exploring what needs to be done to achieve equality across all industries, at all levels, and in all professions.
With the World Economic Forum’s 2017 Global Gender Gap Report findings telling us that gender parity is over 200 years away – and with global activism for women’s equality fuelled by movements like #MeToo, #TimesUp – there is a strong global momentum striving for gender parity.

Join us at Kellogg College on International Women’s Day as we hear from two women who will talk about gender parity in the workplace, sharing their own experiences and exploring what needs to be done to achieve equality across all industries, at all levels, and in all professions.

Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town is Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Lords and shadow Brexit minister.

Betty Webb was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park, working on Japanese air codes during the Second World War.

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
Betty Webb
Baroness Haytor
Judith Holder
Keywords
Bletchley Park
international women's day
code breaking
gender parity
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 20/03/2018
Duration: 00:47:50

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