Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Cancer: why it's bad to the bone

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
Why is cancer metastasis to bone so devastating, what are the challenges, and what are we trying to do about it.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Claire Edwards
Keywords
bone cancer
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:13:14

Subscribe

Download

Climate Change and the fall of the Pyramid Age of Egypt

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
Is Climate Change responsible for the downfall of the Pyramid Age of Egypt
Recent palaeoenvironmental evidence suggests that northeast Africa and southwest Asia were struck by an intense 'mega-drought' around the year 2200 BC. The event has already been blamed for the collapse of complex societies in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley. I am trying to radiocarbon date both the drought event, at the headwaters of the Nile, and the collapse of the Pyramid Age of Egypt. Ultimately, I am hoping to determine whether Climate Change may have been responsible for the downfall of the state.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Michael Dee
Keywords
climate change
egypt
radiocarbon
nile
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:11:24

Subscribe

Download

Earth’s earliest super predators

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
Anomalocaridids: their ecology & their diversity.
The Cambrian Explosion was a major biodiversification event that saw the rise of nearly all animal phyla in a rapid burst 500 million years ago. The anomalocaridids are iconic members of these primitive animal ecosystems, owing to their huge size, bizarre morphology and complicated history of desription. In this talk, I will discuss their ecology, and particularly the view that the anomalocardidids were highly specialised apex predators attacking trilobites. My reserach has shown that these animals were actually highly diverse and employed a wider range of feeding strategies than previously assumed, including generalised predation and even suspension feeding.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Allison Daley
Keywords
anomalocaridids cambrian
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:12:36

Subscribe

Download

The ethics of rail travel; or, what George Eliot can teach us about HS2

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
An analysis of George Eliot's 'Middlemarch' and how the writer's critique of railroads might inform an ethically sensitive approach to HS2
Whilst no-one would question the economic advantages of a high-speed rail network connecting major cities in the UK, there is still little agreement about the feasibility of the government’s £50 billion HS2 project. My talk will apply an analysis of George Eliot’s Middlemarch (1874) to this issue, asking how the writer’s critique of railroads might inform an ethically sensitive approach to HS2. Are the benefits only felt by city dwellers? Can the wealth railways generate be equitably distributed? Are they socially divisive? These questions pertain as much to HS2 as they did to rail travel in England in the nineteenth century.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Philip Chadwick
Keywords
middlemarch
hs2
railroads
nineteenth century
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:12:57

Subscribe

Download

Trade Unions and North Africa's Arab Spring

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
What role did trade unions play in the Egyptian and Tunisian uprisings of 2010/2011?
What role did trade unions play in the Egyptian and Tunisian uprisings of 2010/2011? This talk challenges the predominant assumption in research on trade unions and democratization rule, namely that trade unions are necessarily driven by material interests or by the defence of their members' interests in such scenarios. Instead,I argue that in some cases, especially under authoritarian regimes with highly restrictive labor legislation, unions may be, by design, incapable of defending workers’ interests. I refer to these types of unions as ‘unions minus’ (Egypt). In other cases, unions may occasionally champion agendas that transcend workers’ interests. I refer to these types of unions as ‘unions plus’ (Tunisia). In both scenarios, ‘unions’ are transformed into qualitatively different types of actors than is conventionally assumed in the scholarship on unions and transitions.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Dina Bishara
Keywords
Arab Spring
uprising
Tunisia
egypt
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:07:54

Subscribe

Download

What can dinosaurs tell us about evolution?

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
Fossil records tell us a lot about evolution around the time of dinosaurs

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Roger Benson
Keywords
dinosaurs
evolution
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:13:41

Subscribe

Download

Lost in Translation? Experiencing the body on stage and screen

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
How audiences respond to the body on stage and on screen.
This presentation will seek to explore how audiences respond to the body on stage and on screen. We will explore the concept of ‘liveness’ and question how the physical presence of an actor alters our expectation of a cinematic/ theatrical event. We will touch on spectator theory, in both theatre and film, briefly explaining the key theories and concepts in relation to this. Finally, we will apply this to a practical example, using the play The Singular Life of Albert Nobbs and the corresponding film to explore what all this theory means in practice. We will conclude by offering up for discussion the question of to what extent we apply ‘theatrical’ or ‘cinematic’ modes of interpretation when we look at bodies in real life.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Alexandra Greenfield
Vanessa Lee
Keywords
drama
stage
screen
liveness
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:13:49

Subscribe

Download

Colouring-in for Adults

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
Embed
How flow cytometry can help investigations into immune-mediated diseases.
Flow cytometry is a technique which uses flourescent compounds of different colours to label molecules on cells. Using this approach we can investigate the cell populations responsible for causing immune-mediated diseases such as Ankylosing Spondylitis and explore how new therapies can alter the behaviour of the different cell types.

Episode Information

Series
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
People
Hussein Al-Mossowi
Keywords
flow cytometry
immune-mediated
Department: St Edmund Hall
Date Added: 11/06/2015
Duration: 00:11:04

Subscribe

Download

St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks

Image
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2015: Teddy Talks
St Edmund Hall’s inaugural Research Expo took place on 28 February 2015. It was a celebration of the great diversity of research currently being undertaken at the College, and was an opportunity for students and academics to interact, learn and engage with colleagues across all disciplines. The ‘Teddy Talks’, given by St Edmund Hall academics and postgraduate students, were a key part of the Expo. Aimed at a non-specialist audience and lasting around 12 minutes each, they give a quick introduction into a wide variety of research areas.

Subscribe

Suffering History: Phenomenology at the Intersection of Disease and Illness

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
Embed
A presentation by Austin Argentieri.
Through highlighting some ethnographic examples and lessons from contemporary placebo research, Austin Argentieri (Oxford, Anthropology) discusses how phenomenology allows us to move beyond the distinction between biological disease and embodied illness to examine how social relationships, history, and embodied experience alter human biology and the evolution of viruses.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Austin Argentieri
Keywords
phenomenology
biology
evolution
viruses
history
social science
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 10/06/2015
Duration: 00:17:24

Subscribe

Download

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 2108
  • Page 2109
  • Page 2110
  • Page 2111
  • Page 2112
  • Page 2113
  • Page 2114
  • Page 2115
  • Page 2116
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Login
'Oxford Podcasts' X Account @oxfordpodcasts | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2026 The University of Oxford