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Alys Moody

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Peter Boxall

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Hunger Artistry: Kafka and the Art of Starvation

Series
Oxford Kafka24
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Kafka’s provocative story “The Hunger Artist” explores starvation, art, and the nature of human existence. Experts discuss the story and its reception.
Kafka’s “The Hunger Artist” takes its cue from the real fasting performers who until the early years of the twentieth century would starve themselves for the entertainment of paying audiences. The story has been translated into theatre, comic form, animation and a new ballet has been commissioned as part of the Oxford Kafka celebrations. It has also inspired writers, artists and academics to explore the politics and art of starvation in the twentieth century and beyond. This discussion explores the story and its reception from the present day ,in the context of eating disorders hunger strikes and starvation used as a weapon of war.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Kafka24
People
Peter Boxall
Ankhi Mukherjee
Meindert Peters
Karen Leeder
Alys Moody
Keywords
kafka
hunger
starvation
reception
translation
dance
time
death
art
Department: Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages
Date Added: 10/07/2024
Duration: 01:03:46

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Kristin Scheible

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Asian Territorial Deity Cosmologies as Vehicles for the Transmission of Buddhadharma (Oxford Treasure Seminar Series)

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
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Robert Mayer's analysis of Guru Chowang's enduring connection between territorial deity cosmologies and the preservation of hidden teachings in Tibetan Buddhism
Academic scholars are accustomed to understanding gter as sacred texts often associated with Padmasambhava, within a cult deriving historically from ancient imperial burials. Yet the great 13th-century Padmasambhava devotee Guru Chowang primarily understood gter, by definition, within a mundane framework, barely mentioning Padmasambhava at first, and with not a word about ancient tombs. Even more striking about Chowang’s understandings of gter are their widespread and continuing persistence, as suggested by recent ethnographies of Tibet’s territorial deity cosmologies. For rather than place ancient tombs at the centre of his analysis, Chowang looked to popular terrestrial deity cosmologies to provide a vehicle for Padmasambhava’s hidden teachings. This graft of Indian Buddhist notions of transcendent, spiritual, transmission onto mundane Tibetan territorial deity cosmologies still thrives to this day. Indeed, Tibetan scholars understood Indian Buddhism previously to have made a similar use of India’s nāga and yakṣa territorial deity cosmologies for the concealment and rediscovery of Buddhist teachings.

Episode Information

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
People
Robert Mayer
Keywords
Indo-Tibetan Buddhism
treasure literature
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 05/07/2024
Duration: 00:40:51

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Nāgas and relic treasures in the Mahāvaṃsa (Oxford Treasure Seminar Series)

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
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Kristin Scheible uncovers the hidden role of nāgas in defining Buddhist treasures and explores their surprising significance in safeguarding sacred relics through early texts
Much of the literature on nāgas in Indian Buddhist monasticism has focused on their rain-making and monastery-protecting duties. However, early Buddhist texts are full of narratives about nāgas serving the Buddha, dharma, and saṅgha by guarding in their subterranean palaces a variety of specifically Buddhist treasures. For example, nāgas played exactly this role in an important Pāli Buddhist text from Nāgārjuna’s roughly contemporaneous and neighbouring Sri Lanka, the Dīpavaṃsa. The fifth century Mahāvaṃsa enhances the depiction of nāgas as hoarders and valuers of treasures. Scheible argues that nāgas were not background characters in the Pāli Buddhist imaginaire around Nāgārjuna’s time; by stealing, hoarding, and venerating various types of sacred relics of the Buddha in their nāgaloka they in fact define what a treasure is.

Episode Information

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
People
Kristin Scheible
Keywords
Indian Buddhism
treasure literature
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 05/07/2024
Duration: 00:41:46

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Digital News Report 2024. Episode 4: How much people pay for news

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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How much money are people paying for news around the world?
In this episode of our Digital News Report 2024 podcast series, we look at how much money people pay for news and how this compares to the ‘full ticket’ price. We look at payment trends around the world, the various ways news organisations price their subscriptions, and how much non-subscribers say they would be prepared to pay for news.
See our website for a full transcript: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/news/our-podcast-digital-news-report-2024-episode-4-how-much-people-pay-news

The speakers:
Craig T. Robertson is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. His research focus includes news trust and credibility, fact-checking and verification, and how both partisan attitudes and epistemic beliefs factor into these domains. He is the author of the Digital News Report 2024 chapter into how much people pay for online news https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news-report/2024/how-much-do-people-pay-online-news-what-might-encourage-others-pay
Our host Federica Cherubini is Director of Leadership Development at the Reuters Institute. She is an expert in newsroom operations and organisational change, with more than ten years of experience spanning major publishers, research institutes and editorial networks around the world.

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Craig T. Robertson
Federica Cherubini
Keywords
news
journalism
media
subscriptions
reader revenue
monetisation
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 05/07/2024
Duration: 00:16:30

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Donna West Brett

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Modernist Photobooks, Propaganda and the Everyday

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
Embed
Associate Professor Donna West Brett gives a lecture on the collection of photobooks donated to the Bodleian Library in 2020 by Sir Charles Chadwyck-Healey.
Conveying meaning through photos alone, the photobook is a radical format that enabled the widespread dissemination of modernist aesthetics. This lecture will take a closer look at the way photobooks portray the ‘everyday’ – the familiar, the practical, the ordinary – and its intersection with the visual languages of politics and propaganda.

Speaker
Donna West Brett is Associate Professor and Chair of Art History at The University of Sydney. She is author of Photography and Place: Seeing and Not Seeing Germany After 1945 (Routledge, 2016); co-editor with Natalya Lusty, Photography and Ontology: Unsettling Images (Routledge, 2019), and has published widely on photographic history. She is Research Leader for Photographic Cultures at Sydney, and Editorial Member for the Visual Culture and German Contexts Series, Bloomsbury. Brett is a recipient of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, Ernst and Rosemarie Keller Fund, and Sloan Fellow in Photography at the Bodleian Libraries for 2024.

Episode Information

Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
Donna West Brett
Keywords
photobooks
photography
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 03/07/2024
Duration:

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Louise Ross

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

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