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former Keeper of the British Museum Money and Medals department and expert in Asian numismatics. Shreya Gupta

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Ashis Ray

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Upping the ante: how word choice, quotation and allusion in poems raise the stakes

Series
Poetry with A.E. Stallings
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Upping the ante: how word choice, quotation and allusion in poems raise the stakes (Professor of Poetry lecture, Nov 2024)
A.E. Stallings is an American poet who studied Classics at the University of Georgia and Oxford. She has published four collections of poetry, Archaic Smile, Hapax, and Olives, and most recently, Like, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She has published three verse translations, Lucretius's The Nature of Things (in rhyming fourteeners!), Hesiod's Works and Days, and an illustrated The Battle Between the Frogs and the Mice. A selected poems, This Afterlife, is just out from FSG in the US and Carcanet in the UK.

Episode Information

Series
Poetry with A.E. Stallings
People
Alicia Stallings
Keywords
poetry
quotation
allusion
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 04/12/2024
Duration: 00:55:55

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Interview with Joe Cribb on the British Museum coin collection by Shreya Gupta

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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This interview discusses Joe's interest and approach in studying and curating coins, as well as the research being undertaken on the British Museum's South Asian coin collection.
In this interview Joe talks about his interest in Asian numismatics and his initial work at the British Museum. He discusses the idea and curation of the British Museum's HSBC Money gallery. We discuss his collaboration projects with scholars from South Asia and the access that different audiences have to these collections.

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Joe Cribb
former Keeper of the British Museum Money and Medals department and expert in Asian numismatics. Shreya Gupta
Doctoral Researcher
Ashmolean Museum and University of Exeter
Keywords
indian coins
South Asia
Indian history
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 04/12/2024
Duration: 01:25:42

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The Trial that Shook Britain: How a Court Martial Hastened Acceptance of Indian Independence

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Book talk with Ashis Ray
The Indian National Army (INA) trials of 1945–46 have generally been given short shrift by historians in their cataloguing of the Indian freedom movement. This book examines to what extent the trials had an impact on the final phase of India’s quest for independence. In so doing, it unveils that, while the Indian National Congress’s extended odyssey to win independence was essentially about a passive push-back, at a critical juncture of its campaign to extinguish British colonialism in India, it applauded and capitalised on the INA’s use of force. The central, explosive narrative is about Britain holding a court martial of three officers of the INA – Shah Nawaz Khan, Prem Sahgal and Gurbaksh Dhillon – convicting them, before a dramatic turn in events.
The material unearthed by the book throws new light on a decisive juncture leading to the transfer of power in India. It will be indispensable for researchers interested in South Asia, especially the Indian freedom movement. It will be invaluable for students of history, colonialism, military studies, politics in pre-Partition India and law.

Ashis Ray has been a foreign correspondent since 1977, broadcasting on BBC, CNN and ITN and writing for Ananda Bazar Group, The Times of India, The Tribune, The Hindu, Hindustan Times, The Guardian, The Observer, The Times, Financial Times and Nikkei Asia, among other publications. He was CNN’s founding South Asia bureau chief before becoming the network’s editor-at-large. He has been elected president of Indian Journalists’ Association (Europe) for several terms. In 1982, the Commonwealth Institute selected him among 10 ‘eminent Indians’ in Britain. In 1995, he was conferred a National Press Award in India. He was made an academic visitor by St Antony’s College, Oxford for 2021–22. He intends to continue in academia. The Trial that Shook Britain is his fourth book.

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Ashis Ray
Keywords
South Asia
history
Birtish empire
independence
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 04/12/2024
Duration: 00:42:10

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Prakash Panangaden

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What people really want from platforms

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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In this episode we explore how people around the world use platforms for news and information about politics, the value they see in them, and the concerns that they have.
We hear from co-authors of a new piece of research into what people in eight countries – Argentina, Brazil, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Spain, the UK and the USA – think about a range of platforms, including social media, messaging apps, video platforms and search engines, especially regarding how the access news and information about politics.

Speakers:
Waqas Ejaz is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with at the Reuters Institute and the lead author of 'What do people want? Views on platforms and the digital public sphere in eight countries'

Rasmus Nielsen is a Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Copenhagen. He is a Senior Research Associate, and former Director, at the Reuters Institute. He is a co-author of the repor 'What do people want? Views on platforms and the digital public sphere in eight countries'

Our host Mitali Mukherjee is the Acting Director and Director of Journalist Programmes at the Reuters Institute. She's a political economy journalist with more than two decades of experience in TV, print and digital journalism.

Find a full transcript here: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/news/our-podcast-what-people-really-want-platforms

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Mitali Mukherjee
Waqas Ejaz
Rasmus Nielsen
Keywords
journalism
news
politics
social media
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 02/12/2024
Duration: 00:34:11

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From probabilistic bisimulation to representation learning via metrics

Series
Strachey Lectures
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Strachey Lecture: From probabilistic bisimulation to representation learning via metrics - Professor Prakash Panangaden
Bisimulation is a fundamental equivalence relation in process theory invented by Robin Milner and with an elegant fixed-point definition due to David Park. In this talk I will review the concept of bisimulation and then discuss its probabilistic analogue. This was extended to systems with continuous state spaces. Despite its origin in theoretical work, it has proved to be useful in fields like machine learning, especially reinforcement learning. Surprisingly, it turned out that one could prove a striking theorem: a theorem that pins down exactly what differences one can "see" in process behaviours when two systems are not bisimilar.
However, it is questionable whether a concept like equivalence is the right one for quantitative systems. If two systems are almost, but not quite, the same, bisimulation would just say that they are not equivalent. One would like to say in some way that they are "almost" the same. Metric analogues of bisimulation were developed to capture a notion of behavioral similarity rather than outright equivalence. These ideas have been adopted by the machine learning community and a bisimulation-style metric was developed for Markov decision processes. Recent work has shown that variants of these bisimulation metrics can be useful in representation learning. I will tell the tale of this arc of ideas in as accessible a way as possible.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Prakash Panangaden
Keywords
bisimulation
machine learning
reinforcement learning
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 02/12/2024
Duration: 00:55:03

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Marathi Vojjala

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Sonja Mejcher-Atassi

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