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Texts, Talks and Tailoring: Adichie and her Fashion Politics

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Matthew Lecznar assesses the fashion politics of Adichie's fiction and public discourse
Matthew Lecznar (University of Sussex) identifies the politics of fashion as central to the rise of Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie to international prominence as a literary celebrity and public intellectual. He suggests that Adichie’s fashion and body politics function not only as media of self-promotion but must be regarded as a transmedia space that allows her to reach diverse audiences of different socio-economic and cultural backgrounds.

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Matthew Lecznar
Keywords
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
literary celebrity
politics
fashion
body
race
gender
public intellectual
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 03/04/2016
Duration: 00:23:14

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Hemingway vs Gellhorn: A Famous D-Day Rivalry

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Kate McLoughlin offers an intriguing case study of the gendering of writerly fame.
Kate McLoughlin (University of Oxford) talks about the textual war between Ernest Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn in the pages of Collier's Magazine in July 1944. The story of the magazine's editorial interventions in presenting their D-Day dispatches tells us about authority and ambition in print, how men and women correspondents were valued during World War II, and the premium placed on the eye-witness account of a male 'national treasure'.

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Kate McLoughlin
Keywords
Martha Gellhorn
Ernest Hemingway
literary celebrity
war correspondence
journalism
gender
World War II
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 03/04/2016
Duration: 00:23:21

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Between Morality and the Marketplace: Literary Celebrity and the Transatlantic Anti-Slavery Movement

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Simon Morgan discusses the tensions within the transatlantic anti-slavery movement between literary celebrity and moral responsibility.
Simon Morgan (Leeds Beckett University) examines these tensions through the contrasting cases of Frederick Douglass and Harriet Beecher Stowe: the former trying to use his status as an ex-slave and anti-slavery orator to promote himself as an author, the latter using her status as international literary celebrity to claim authority as a spokeswoman against slavery. For both literature was an avenue through which they could intervene effectively in political debate and construct their public personae.

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Simon Morgan
Keywords
Frederick Douglass
Harriet Beecher Stowe
literary celebrity
anti-slavery movement
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 03/04/2016
Duration: 00:26:00

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The Rhetoric of Fame: Persuading the People in Early Modern England

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Kate De Rycker demonstrates that the social role of 16th-century English writers was becoming increasingly affected by the developing concept of celebrity.
By looking at the 'Marprelate Controversy', the 'paper war' between the fictional persona of the Puritan Martin Marprelate, the established Church, and later professional writers, Kate De Rycker (University of Newcastle) argues that celebrity can indeed be considered to be a developing concept in the late sixteenth century, with the rise of cheap print, the awareness of an unknowable audience, and the language of rhetorical persuasion. 

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Kate De Rycker
Keywords
Marprelate controversy
literary fame
politics
early modern England
public persona
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 03/04/2016
Duration: 00:27:20

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Disraeli's 'Spectre of Unsatisfied Ambition': Literary Celebrity in/and Political Office

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Sandra Mayer explores Disraeli's dual commitment to art and action against the background of Victorian celebrity culture.
Benjamin Disraeli's papers in the Bodleian Library allow for an intriguing glimpse into the public reception of his dual role as a successful novelist and eminent statesman. Analyzing a selection of these popular responses to Disraeli's dexterous cross-field migrations, Sandra Mayer (University of Vienna/Wolfson College, University of Oxford) discusses the dual commitment to art and action of celebrity writers in political office and its reverberations in nineteenth-century fan culture.

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Sandra Mayer
Keywords
Disraeli
literary celebrity
politics
Victorian public sphere
fan culture
Hughenden papers
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 02/04/2016
Duration: 00:32:06

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Authorship, Politics, Celebrity: Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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In this roundtable discussion, Caroline Davis, Olivier Driessens, and Peter D McDonald reflect on literature as a mode of public intervention.
The members of this expert panel, chaired by Elleke Boehmer, explore the socio-political dimension of literary production and launch a plea for institutional readings of literature that acknowledge the crucial gatekeeping role of publishers, literary agents, critics, and prize-giving bodies. Focusing on J.M. Coetzee's 'Diary of a Bad Year', Peter D McDonald (University of Oxford) reflects on the ambivalent status of literature as a form of public discourse. Caroline Davis (Oxford Brookes), analyzing the refashioning and repositioning of African writers for the UK and US markets, provides intriguing insights into the publishers' interventions in the cross-field migrations between art and politics. Olivier Driessens (University of Cambridge) then stresses the need for us to shift our focus from the author as a lone genius to the collaborative processes involved in the creation of literary reputations.

Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Elleke Boehmer
Caroline Davis
Olivier Driessens
Peter D McDonald
Keywords
literary celebrity
politics
authorship
publishing industry
cultural production
prize culture
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 02/04/2016
Duration: 00:36:28

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The Glymphatic System

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
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Thomas Willis Lecture

Episode Information

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
People
Maiken Nedergaard
Keywords
neuroscience
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
Date Added: 01/04/2016
Duration: 00:53:15

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Advanced imaging of the spinal cord in multiple sclerosis

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
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NCDN Seminar

Episode Information

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
People
Olga Ciccarelli
Keywords
neuroscience
Multiple sclerosis
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
Date Added: 01/04/2016
Duration: 00:45:14

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Smart Technologies and Public Participation in Transport Planning

Series
Transport Studies Unit Podcasts
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Dr Richard Kingston and Dr Bryan Marshall provide a critical view on smart cities and discuss some of its implications to rethink the role of citizen engagement in urban and transport planning.
One of the core ideas behind Smart Cities is that the progress in information technologies enables urban and transport planning to be based on better informed decisions using data-driven solutions to urban problems. Yet our understanding of how the emerging role of technology and data in our cities will shape public participation in urban and transport planning is still limited. A well-discussed pitfall is that smart city technologies can give the false idea that urban planning becomes simply a matter of efficient administration, leading to technocratic approaches in decision-making. Despite the potential of such smart technologies to engender new forms of public participation and reduce information gaps between citizens and local governments, another pitfall is that not all social groups equally have the appropriate skills and resources to use these new technologies to influence planning decisions. In both cases, an uncritical adoption of smart cities can undermine participatory planning, either by withdrawing the political and participatory dimension of planning, or by exacerbating the social imbalance of who gets to be heard. This seminar will provide critical view on smart cities and discuss some of its implications to rethink the role of citizen engagement in urban and transport planning.
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
Transport Studies Unit Podcasts
People
Richard Kingston
Bryan Marshall
Keywords
technology
public participation
cities
transport
planning
TSU
Department: Oxford University Centre for the Environment
Date Added: 01/04/2016
Duration: 01:12:14

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Damage Assessment and Digital 2D -3D Documentation: Selected case studies from the World Heritage Site of Petra, Jordan

Series
Protecting the Past: Archaeology, Conservation and Tourism in the North of Jordan
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Dr Bala'awi (Hashemite University) presents the results of a project of digital heritage documentation at Petra conducted by the Hashemite University

Episode Information

Series
Protecting the Past: Archaeology, Conservation and Tourism in the North of Jordan
People
Fadi Bala'awi
Keywords
digital heritage documentation
Petra
Treasury
Khazneh
Deir
Monastery
Bab el-Siq
Palace Tomb
Corinthian Tomb
salinity
Department: School of Archaeology
Date Added: 31/03/2016
Duration: 00:07:31

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