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Daily Rhythms, urban Rhythms: City Films of the 1920s

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Daily Rhythms, urban Rhythms: City Films of the 1920s

Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Laura Marcus
Keywords
literature
cosmopolitanism
metropolitanism
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 00:24:11

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Cosmopolitanism and Provincialism: Distant Intimacy and the Transatlantic Village Tale

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Josephine McDonagh shows under what circumstances the provincial may also be cosmopolitan by analysing Mary Russell Mitford's work and the case of the village tale.
From Three Mile Cross, Mitford’s village home, across the Atlantic to Boston and beyond, Mitford’s village tales could be said to go global. This paper examines the way in which the village tale provides a set of terms and an imagined space through with circles of writers and literary people in different countries collectively conceived a transatlantic literary world. It considers the implications of this and of the instability of the distinctions between the terms provincial and cosmopolitan, and the legacies of this in the mid-nineteenth-century shaping of national literary traditions.

Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Josephine McDonagh
Keywords
literature
cosmopolitanism
provincialism
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 00:22:12

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Virginia Woolf’s French Cloak, or, To the Lighthouse previews in Paris

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Caroline Patey analyses the strange anecdote of Virginia Woolf's first ever translation in French and the effect it had on her French reception.
In 1926, 'Commerce' published a translation of 'Time Passes'/'Le temps passe' before the novel was even out in Great Britain and in English. Subsequent research has shown that the translator - Charles Mauron - was working on a version different from both holograph version and printed text. What is thus the status of the 'third' text? Did the choice of Commerce inflect Woolf's image in France? And above all how did Mauron's version contribute to her literary image in the hexagon?

Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Caroline Patey
Keywords
literature
Virgina Woolf
cosmopolitanism
Charles Mauron
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 00:28:28

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Brussels fin de siècle between Paris and London

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Clément Dessy examines the Anglophilia of literary and artistic symbolist groups in Brussels.
Between 1880 and 1930, Belgium and Brussels began to be perceived as places where cosmopolitanism could take root. This paper analyses the Anglophile attitude of Belgian literary and artistic avant-gardes. Belgian symbolists targeted both Paris and London in order to lift Brussels from its status of a second-level cultural capital to the level of the French and British metropoles.

Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Clement Dessy
Keywords
literature
cosmopolitanism
literary criticism
anglophilia
Brussels
symbolism
decadence
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 00:23:25

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Translational Equaliberty: Language as Cosmopolitan Right in the Europe of Migrations (Keynote address)

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
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Emily Apter speaks about the right to a cosmopolitan citizenship, showing how questions of language and translation have acquired political urgency in the context of the global refugee crisis.
Emily Apter discusses cosmopolitanism in relation to migration and the concept of linguistic citizenship. She explores the translation zone of the transit camp and detention centre, the status of the strait as middle passage of political peril, and the politics of translational triage and the accent test. Apter approaches the refugee crisis as a condition that produces new unfreedoms of speech and forms of translational injustice.

Episode Information

Series
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
People
Emily Apter
Keywords
literature
language
cosmopolitanism
Department: Trinity College
Date Added: 05/04/2016
Duration: 01:08:09

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Cicero's 'De Inventione''

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In Our Spare Times
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Oxford students discuss roman senator Cicero.
In 43BC, a year after the assassination of Julius Caesar, a man's severed head and hands were nailed to the speaker's podium of the Roman Senate. They had belonged to Marcus Tullius Cicero, who had risen from humble origins to become one of the most significant political figures in Rome. A lawyer by training, master orator, his name has become a byword for rhetorical skill and eloquence. He lived a
remarkable life in the dying days of the Roman Republic, but also wrote extensively, on rhetorical theory, religion, and philosophy. The legacy of his writings, on Western education and thought in the Middle Ages, was immense.In this podcast we focus on his earliest surviving work. 'De Inventione' – meaning 'invention' or 'discovery' – is a treatise on rhetoric written by Cicero as a young man.
Host: Aled Walker, 2nd year Mathematics DPhil student at Magdalen College

Guests: Thierry Hirsch, recent Classics DPhil graduate of Lincoln College

Alice Harberd, a third year undergraduate Classics student at Corpus
Christi College

Andrew Sillett, a lecturer in Classical languages and literature at
Brasenose College.

Episode Information

Series
In Our Spare Times
People
Aled Walker
Thierry Hirsch
Alice Harberd
Andrew Sillett
Keywords
history
rome
cicero
julius caesar
Department: Magdalen College
Date Added: 04/04/2016
Duration: 00:46:11

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Dark Matter

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In Our Spare Times
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Oxford Students discuss Dark Matter.
For over three millennia, astronomers have been observing the heavens. Yet, less than one hundred years ago, observations were made suggesting the existence of a previously unknown substance, permeating the universe in vast abundance, yet invisible to even the most powerful telescope. This substance has been aptly christened 'dark matter', and though in nature it seems to be ubiquitous, all attempts to explicitly detect it have hitherto been unsuccessful. So, what is dark matter, why do we think it exists, and what has it got to do with a four-ton tank of liquid argon, two kilometres underneath Ontario?

Host: Aled Walker, 2nd year Mathematics DPhil student at Magdalen College

Guests: Peter Hatfield, a 3rd year Physics DPhil student at Lincoln College

Fran Day, a 3rd year Physics DPhil student at Magdalen College

Talitha Bromwich, a 2nd year Physics DPhil student at Magdalen College

Episode Information

Series
In Our Spare Times
People
Aled Walker
Peter Hatfield
Fran Day
Talitha Bromwich
Keywords
Physics
astrophysics
science
dark matter
Energy
Department: Magdalen College
Date Added: 04/04/2016
Duration: 00:42:06

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In Our Spare Times

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In Our Spare Times
An academic podcast in which a panel of Oxford students and young researchers join hosts Jan-Willem Prügel, Aled Walker and Alice Harberd to discuss their academic and intellectual passions. Each episode will have a different theme, ranging from Marxism to Medieval Song, Cicero to Sondheim -- a tribute to the astonishing diversity of thought which takes place in Oxford.

Twitter: @Oxford_IOST

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Books for mind and community in 12th-century Oxford and Cirencester

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The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
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In this talk Andrew Dunning (Royal Bank of Canada Foundation Fellow) traces the development of the work of Alexander Neckam, one of the earliest known lecturers in Oxford, through manuscripts housed at the Bodleian.
Leading up to the creation of the University, the priories of the Augustinian canons were among the most prominent intellectual foundations in twelfth-century Oxford. One of the earliest known lecturers in the town was Alexander Neckam, working at St Frideswide (now Christ Church) from around 1190, who practised a brand of education that promoted the development of individuals and the health of communities. Through manuscripts housed at the Bodleian, it is possible to trace the development of his work, and to uncover his peers at his later home in Cirencester. They emerge as precise scholars who produced books collaboratively, and later created a monument to his writings in an exchange with Malmesbury Abbey.

Episode Information

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
Andrew Dunning
Keywords
english literature
bodleian
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 04/04/2016
Duration: 00:47:23

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters

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Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
Cosmopolitanism, derived from the ancient Greek for ‘world citizenship’, offers a radical alternative to nationalism, asking individuals to imagine themselves as part of a community that goes beyond national and linguistic boundaries. Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in cosmopolitanism in the humanities and social sciences, especially within philosophy, sociology and politics. Cosmopolitanism, however, has also exercised a shaping influence on modern literary culture. It is well known that during the Enlightenment it found an embodiment in the Republic of Letters. Its evolution thereafter included uneasy alliances with the idea of Empire in the nineteenth century, and with the experiments of the international avant gardes and modernist circles, and the phenomenon of globalisation in the twentieth. Through these, and more, cultural formations cosmopolitanism has given rise to new ways of writing, reading, translating and circulating texts; these processes have, in turn, led to new understandings of individual and national identity, new forms of ethics and new configurations of aesthetic and political engagement. From Kant to Derrida, cosmopolitanism has in the course of history been seen as fostering peace and communication across borders. Far from being uncontroversial, though, it has also been attacked by those who have denounced its universalism as impossible and its social ethos as elitist.
The papers gathered here were delivered at the conference Cosmopolis and Beyond, which was held at Trinity College, Oxford, in March 2016. The keynote addresses were given by Emily Apter (NYU) and Gisèle Sapiro (EHESS). The individual papers explore different literary manifestations of the cosmopolitan ideal, broadly conceived, and its influence on modern literary culture. They tease out elements of continuity and rupture in a long history of literary cosmopolitanism that goes from the decline of the Republic of Letters to the era of globalisation.

The conference was part of the AHRC-funded research project 'The Love of Strangers: Literary Cosmopolitanism in the English Fin de Siècle', led by Stefano Evangelista.

It was organised by Stefano Evangelista (conference organiser) and Clément Dessy (conference assistant).

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