Tanakh and textuality |
Visiting researcher Dr Rachel Wamsley discusses the renowned Oppenheimer Collection, whose holdings shed light on the printing house as a site of cultural and literary encounter between Jews and Christians in early modern Europe. |
Rachel Wamsley |
15 September, 2017 |
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Marconi and media history |
Dr Noah Arceneaux, Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Media Studies, San Diego State University, Byrne-Bussey Marconi Visiting Fellow 2016-17, Bodleian Library, talks about the history of wireless broadcasting and the Bodleian Marconi Archive. |
Noah Arceneaux |
14 September, 2017 |
|
Sendbrief vom Dolmetschen |
Relay Reading for the Launch of the Taylorian Pamphlet Series. |
Henrike Lähnemann, Howard Jones, Emma Huber |
31 May, 2017 |
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A life in politics: Lord Heseltine in conversation with Lord Hennessy |
Michael Heseltine discusses his political career with Peter Hennessy. |
Michael Heseltine, Peter Hennessy, Richard Ovenden |
21 March, 2017 |
|
Nicholas Crouch's seventeenth-century books |
Professor Adam Smyth talks to cataloguer Lucy Kelsall and book conservator Nikki Tomkins about the seventeenth-century library of Nicholas Crouch, now in Balliol College, and how to deal with fragile books. |
Adam Smyth, Lucy Kelsall, Nikki Tomkins |
13 March, 2017 |
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Law: Printing the Corpus iuris civilis in the Sixteenth Century |
Professor Rodolfo Savelli, Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza, Università di Genova, gives a talk for the 15th Century Booktrade series on 10th March 2017. |
Rodolfo Savelli |
13 March, 2017 |
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Theology: The Gutenberg Bible in the Context of Fifteenth-Century Manuscript Bibles |
Dr Paul Needham, Scheide Library, Princeton University Library gives a talk for the 15th Century Booktrade series on 3rd March 2017. |
Paul Needham |
6 March, 2017 |
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Manuscript Studies: Greek Script and Type in the Fifteenth century. Demetrius Damilas between Milan and Florence |
Nigel Wilson, fellow of Lincoln College, reads a lecture written by Dr David Speranzi, Firenze, Istituto Nazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento. Dr Speranzi was unable to attend the recording of this lecture so Nigel Wilson read in his absence. |
David Speranzi, Nigel Wilson |
28 February, 2017 |
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Economics: The Price of Books in Early Modern Europe: An Economic Perspective |
Dr Jeremiah Dittmar, Department of Economics, London School of Economics, gives a talk on 10th February 2017. |
Jeremiah Dittmar |
22 February, 2017 |
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Classics: Incunabular Stemmatics, |
Professor Stephen Oakley, Faculty of Classics, Cambridge University, gives a talk for the 15th Century Booktrade series on 3rd February 2017. |
Stephen Oakley |
22 February, 2017 |
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The Italian Trade with the Frankfurt Book Fair around 1600 |
The History of the Book and Cultural History with Professor Ian Maclean, All Souls College, Oxford on 20th January 2017. |
Ian Maclean |
25 January, 2017 |
|
Rumi: his life, work, and poetry |
Dr Zahra Taheri, Bahari Visiting Fellow in the Persian Arts of the Book, speaks about Rumi's life, mystical teaching, doctrine, and poetry. With Music by Dr Peyman Heydarian. |
Zahra Taheri, Peyman Heydarian, Fitzroy Morrissey |
24 January, 2017 |
|
Staging History: favourite objects and concluding thoughts |
The series concludes with each of the contributors discussing an object that particularly stands out for them from the exhibition items and what it reveals about staging history in this period. |
Michael Burden, David Kennerley, Susan Valladares |
14 December, 2016 |
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History on stage |
In this episode, the contributors discuss why history so frequently featured on stage in this period, and the significance of the historical events that these dramas staged for contemporary audiences. |
Michael Burden, David Kennerley, Susan Valladares |
14 December, 2016 |
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Experiencing the late Georgian theatre |
This episode explores what it was like to experience theatre in this era, including how theatres were laid out and designed, what it was like to be in the audience, and how plays were written, advertised and staged. |
Michael Burden, David Kennerley, Susan Valladares |
14 December, 2016 |
|
Theatre in the ‘Long Regency’ era |
This episode gives a brief introduction to the history of this period, beginning with the American War of Independence and culminating in the early years of the reign of Queen Victoria. |
Michael Burden, David Kennerley, Susan Valladares |
14 December, 2016 |
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Research business and the shortwave beam: Marconi and the uses of wireless in postwar years |
Giovanni Paoloni discusses the influence of the development of the shortwave beam technology on Marconi and the Marconi Company |
Giovanni Paoloni |
3 November, 2016 |
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Marconi's early Latin projects over the South-Atlantic |
Ines Queiroz explores how technical constraints have shaped strategies for wireless networks development |
Inês Queiroz |
3 November, 2016 |
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Performing Shakespeare: then and now |
Jonathan Lloyd and Tiffany Stern, discuss performing Shakespeare in the past and now |
Jonathan Lloyd, Tiffany Stern |
2 November, 2016 |
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Shakespeare and the Victorians |
Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Professor of English Literature, Oxford, gives a talk for Shakespeare Oxford 2016 series. |
Robert Douglas-Fairhurst |
19 October, 2016 |
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Modelos cursivos y aprendizaje de la escritura en la Corona de Castilla en el siglo XV (in Spanish) |
Carmen del Camino (Seville), gives a talk The unskilled scribe: Elementary hands and their place in the history of handwriting, a seminar held on 30th September 2016. |
Carmen del Camino |
14 October, 2016 |
|
Scritture umanistiche elementari (in Italian) |
Teresa De Robertis (Florence), gives a talk for The unskilled scribe: Elementary hands and their place in the history of handwriting, a seminar held on 30th September 2016. |
Teresa De Robertis |
14 October, 2016 |
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Hands turned to stone: some unconventional attempts at inscriptional lettering |
Marc Smith (Paris), gives a talk for The unskilled scribe: Elementary hands and their place in the history of handwriting, a seminar held on 30th September 2016. |
Marc Smith |
14 October, 2016 |
|
Introduction to the unskilled scribe |
Irene Ceccherini (Oxford) gives a talk for the unskilled scribe: Elementary hands and their place in the history of handwriting, a seminar held on 30th September 2016. |
Irene Ceccherini |
14 October, 2016 |
|
Elementary cursive handwriting in English and Scottish Charters, 1150-1250 |
Teresa Webber (Cambridge), gives a talk in the the unskilled scribe: Elementary hands and their place in the history of handwriting, held on September 30th 2016. |
Teresa Webber |
14 October, 2016 |
|
The Paratexts of Conrad Gessner |
Professor Ann Blair on the uses of dedication and the multifarious paratexts of the early modern naturalist and bibliographer Conrad Gessner (1516-65) |
Dennis Duncan, Ann Blair |
3 August, 2016 |
|
Elite Folktales: An Exquisite Sixteenth-Century Persian Illustrated Manuscript in the Bodleian Library's Ouseley Collection |
A conversation with Dr Nasrin Askari, Bahari Visiting Fellow in the Persian Arts of the Book 2016 and Alasdair Watson, Bahari Curator of Persian Collections, Bodleian Library |
Nasrin Askari, Alasdair Watson |
2 August, 2016 |
|
Launch of the 15th Century Booktrade |
Cristina Dondi and her colleagues launch the 15th Century Booktrade. |
Cristina Dondi, Kristian Jensen, Geri Della Rocca de Candal, Simon Walton, Richard Sharpe, Maria Alessandra Panzanelli Fratoni, Karen Limper-Herz, Matilde Malaspina, Yujie Zhong |
21 July, 2016 |
|
Brown's landscapes in the twenty-first century |
Join the head gardeners of Stowe and Compton Verney to explore the challenges, changes and rewards of protecting and preserving Capability Brown's landscapes in his tercentenary year. |
Barry Smith, Gary Webb |
21 July, 2016 |
|
Modernist Marginalia |
Dr Amanda Golden discusses the notes and underlinings that writers like Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath made in their books. |
Dennis Duncan, Amanda Golden |
13 July, 2016 |
|
Elite Folktales: An Exquisite Sixteenth-Century Persian Illustrated Manuscript in the Bodleian Library’s Ouseley Collection |
A conversation with Dr Nasrin Askari, Bahari Visiting Fellow in the Persian Arts of the Book 2016 & Alasdair Watson, Bahari Curator of Persian Collections, Bodleian Library |
Nasrin Askari, Alasdair Watson |
8 July, 2016 |
|
Life, death and astrology in Shakespeare's England |
Lauren Kassell (Reader in the History of Science and Medicine, Cambridge) gives a talk for the Bodleian libraries. |
Lauren Kassell |
30 June, 2016 |
|
Eloquence vault mieulx que force |
Vernacular Translations of Plutarch and Political Argument in Renaissance France |
Rebecca Kingston |
30 June, 2016 |
|
Modernist Prefaces |
Dr Sarah Copland on how Modernist writers such as Henry James and Joseph Conrad used the form of the Preface as a key to their own work, as well as the work of others. |
Dennis Duncan, Sarah Copland |
6 June, 2016 |
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Memorialising Shakespeare: The First Folio and other elegies |
Emma Smith (Professor of English Literature, Oxford), gives a talk on Shakespeare memorials. |
Emma Smith |
2 June, 2016 |
|
"To the Reader" Epistles |
Dr Meaghan Brown discusses the early modern To the Reader epistle, in which publishers directly addressed their buying public. |
Dennis Duncan, Meaghan Brown |
24 May, 2016 |
|
Venus and Adonis |
Professor Katherine Duncan Jones, Senior Research Fellow, Somerville College, gives a talk on Shakespeare's poem, Venus and Adonis. |
Katherine Duncan-Jones |
20 May, 2016 |
|
Donne to Death |
Peter McCullough, Professor of English, University of Oxford, gives a talk on John Donne. |
Peter McCullough |
13 May, 2016 |
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Everyday death in Shakespeare's England |
This podcast talks about accidental deaths and the hazards of everyday life in Shakespeare's day |
Steven Gunn |
5 May, 2016 |
|
The Magic of Shakespeare |
This lecture will celebrate Shakespeare's immortality on the exact 400th anniversary of his burial. It will begin from Theseus' famous speech in A Midsummer Night's Dream about the magical, transformative power of poetry. |
Jonathan Bate |
3 May, 2016 |
|
Books for mind and community in 12th-century Oxford and Cirencester |
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. |
Andrew Dunning |
4 April, 2016 |
|
Early Modern German Literature 1: Das Juttenspiel |
Henrike Lähnemann on the Reformation publication of the ‘Juttenspiel’ |
Henrike Lähnemann |
4 March, 2016 |
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Early Modern German Literature 2: Judith plays |
Henrike Lähnemann on the popularity of the Judith theme in Reformation drama |
Henrike Lähnemann |
4 March, 2016 |
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Bible Translation in Germany |
From Old High German via Martin Luther to Bibel in gerechter Sprache. A whistle stop tour of German Bible translation |
Henrike Lähnemann, Howard Jones, Daniel Lloyd |
3 March, 2016 |
|
1594: Shakespeare's most important year |
In the summer of 1594 William Shakespeare decided to invest around 50 Pounds to become a shareholder in a newly formed acting company: Lord Chamberlain's Men. This lecture examines the consequences of this decision, unique in English theatrical history. |
Bart van Es |
2 March, 2016 |
|
A Great Unrecorded History. LGBT Heritage and World Cultures |
Professor Parkinson discusses how to mobilise historical research into sexuality for maximum impact and the institutional, cultural and political issues that can be at stake, and suggests some of the possible uses of LGBTQ history. |
Richard Parkinson |
25 February, 2016 |
|
Website Reformation: Launching the website by Charlotte Schwarzer |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Charlotte Schwarzer |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: The Reformation Music Project: Alex Lloyd, Tom Hammond-Davies, Harry Meehan |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Alex Lloyd, Tom Hammond-Davies, Harry Meehan |
22 February, 2016 |
|
Website Reformation: The Website: Emma Huber |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Emma Huber |
22 February, 2016 |
|
Website Reformation: Karlstadt pamphlets: Jennifer Bunselmeier |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Jennifer Bunselmeier |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: Lustgarten der Seelen: Klaus Meyer |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Klaus Meyer |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: Weissagung vom Papsttum: Kezia Fender |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Kezia Fender |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: Hans Sachs’ Dialogue: Charlotte Hartmann |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Charlotte Hartmann |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: De captivitate babylonica: Lucas Eigel |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Lucas Eigel |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: Sendbrief vom Dolmetschen: Howard Jones |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Howard Jones |
22 February, 2016 |
|
Website Reformation: Passional Christi & Antichristi: Ed Wareham |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann, Edward Wareham |
22 February, 2016 |
|
The Prayer-Book of Abbess Odilia |
Abbess Baerbel Goercke, Mariensee, delivers a talk for the Medingen Manuscripts Masterclass. |
Bärbel Görcke |
22 February, 2016 |
|
Musical Notation |
Ulrike Hascher-Burger, Utrecht University, delivers a talk for the Medingen Manuscripts Masterclass. |
Ulrike Hascher-Burger |
22 February, 2016 |
|
The Incunable Traces |
Alan Coates, Rare Books Assistant Librarian, Bodleain, delivers a talk for the Medingen Manuscripts Masterclass. |
Alan Coates |
22 February, 2016 |
|
Cistercian Punctuation |
Nigel F. Palmer, Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford, delivers a talk for the Medingen Manuscripts Masterclass. |
Nigel Palmer |
22 February, 2016 |
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Website Reformation: Introduction by Henrike Lähnemann |
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website |
Henrike Lähnemann |
19 February, 2016 |
|
The Plaque in the Psalter and the Bindings |
Andrew Honey, Book Conservator (Research and Teaching), University of Oxford, delivers a talk for the Medingen Manuscripts Masterclass. |
Andrew Honey |
4 February, 2016 |
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Masterclass: Medingen Manuscripts - Introduction |
Introduction to the Masterclass by Professor Henrike Laehnemann, Chair of Medieval German Literature and Linguistics, University of Oxford. |
Henrike Lähnemann |
4 February, 2016 |
|
200 years of fun and games |
Richard Ballam talks about the rich collections of games and pastimes he has recently donated to the Bodleian, the subject of the display Playing with History. |
Richard Ballam |
29 January, 2016 |
|
Session 4 - What has our experience taught us? Lesson for future policy |
Michael Keating and Dr Randolf Kent (BAFUNCS members) give presentations on thier experiences at the UN. Followed by a discussion moderated by Sir Adam Roberts. |
Sir Adam Roberts, Michael Keating, Randolf Kent |
5 November, 2015 |
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Session 3 - Delivering humanitarian aid while protecting human rights: The challenges for the UN of Impartiality, Access and Advocacy |
Sir John Homes and Professor Mukesh Kapila (BAFUNCS members) give presentations on their experience of the UN and the challenges it has in conflict and disaster areas. Followed by a discussion moderated by Professor Guy Goodwin-Gill |
Guy Goodwin-Gill, Sir John Holmes, Mukesh Kapila |
5 November, 2015 |
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Session 2 - Working with political and development actors: Where should UN humanitarians 'sit'? |
Alan Doss and Nicola Dahrendorf (BAFUNCS members) give presentations on the UN working with political and development agencies across the world. Followed by discussion with David Hartland moderating. |
Alan Doss, Nicola Dahrendorf, David Harland |
5 November, 2015 |
|
Session 1 - Delivering Humanitarian Aid: Who does it best? |
Angela Raven-Roberts and Lamees Hafeez, BAFUNCS members, give presentations on who they think deliver humanitarian aid best, the UN or charities. Followed by a discussion moderated by Michael Mosselmans. |
Michael Mosselmans, Angela Raven-Roberts, Lamees Hafeez |
5 November, 2015 |
|
Welcome and Introduction |
Edward Mortimer, CMG, President of BAFUNCS (British Association of Former UN CIvil Servants) introduces the UN at 70: A Witness Seminar. Held in the Bodleian Library on 16th October 2015. |
Edward Mortimer |
5 November, 2015 |
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In Pursuit of Beauty: Modern Guides to the Hair, Face, and Body, 1784-1933 |
Dr Jessica Clark discusses Victorian beauty practices with items from the Bodleian Libraries Special Collections. |
Jessica Clark |
13 October, 2015 |
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The Future of Research Libraries |
A talk delivered by Andrew Green at the Anybook Oxford Libraries Conference 2015 - Adapting for the Future: Developing Our Professions and Services, 21st July 2015. |
Andrew Green |
15 September, 2015 |
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Leadership and Embedding a Culture of Innovation at the University of Manchester |
A talk delivered by Jan Wilkinson at the Anybook Oxford Libraries Conference 2015 - Adapting for the Future: Developing Our Professions and Services, 21st July 2015. |
Jan Wilkinson |
15 September, 2015 |
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The State of the Archives in the UK and the Challenges Ahead |
A talk delivered by Clem Brohier at the Anybook Oxford Libraries Conference 2015 - Adapting for the Future: Developing Our Professions and Services, 21st July 2015. |
Clem Brohier |
15 September, 2015 |
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Evidence-Based Decision Making for Collection Management |
A talk delivered by Paul Cavanagh and James Kay at the Anybook Oxford Libraries Conference 2015 - Adapting for the Future: Developing Our Professions and Services, 21st July 2015. |
Paul Cavanagh, James Kay |
15 September, 2015 |
|
Malone's Chronologizing of Aubrey's Lives (putt in writing... tumultuarily) |
Keynote lecture by Margreta de Grazia, (Emerita Sheli Z. and Burton X. Rosenberg Professor of the Humanities, University of Pennsylvania) for the Marginal Malone conference held in Oxford on June 26th, 2015. |
Margreta de Grazia |
4 August, 2015 |
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Distinguishing Marks of Genius |
What do geniuses have in common, across the arts and sciences? And how do we distinguish genius from talent? Andrew Robinson, author of Genius: A Very Short Introduction, considers (a little of) the evidence. |
Andrew Robinson |
15 July, 2015 |
|
Pieces of the jigsaw: history through the John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera |
A lunchtime lecture by Julie-Anne Lambert accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. |
Julie-Anne Lambert |
10 July, 2015 |
|
The Savile Library |
Lunchtime lecture by Will Poole accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. |
Will Poole |
9 July, 2015 |
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Painted by numbers: decoding Ferdinand Bauer's Flora Graeca colour code |
Lunchtime lecture by Richard Mulholland accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. |
Richard Mullholland |
9 July, 2015 |
|
Mr Douce steps into the nursery and lingers... |
A lunchtime lecture by Clive Hurst accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. |
Clive Hurst |
9 July, 2015 |
|
Beauty and the Victorians |
'Buying beauty in the Victorian period' Dr Jessica Clark looks at the Victorian beauty industry, and the transition from disapproval of artifice to a celebration of the wonders of cosmetics. |
Jess Clark |
9 July, 2015 |
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Marks on canvas, stone, wood and paper: the Genius of the Bodleian Portrait Collection |
Dana Josephson gives a talk for the Marks of Genius Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries series. |
Dana Josephson |
8 July, 2015 |
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Missionaries and Religious Print Culture in Canada |
Bibles and religious literature were an integral part of Canadian society and culture between 1830 and 1900. |
Stuart Barnard |
8 July, 2015 |
|
Writing The Hobbit: a perilous quest |
In this talk Stuart Lee will look at the various texts we may call The Hobbit. Starting with the 1937 edition (on display) he will look at the changes enforced on Tolkien after he had finished The Lord of the Rings and how he coped with these. |
Stuart Lee |
3 June, 2015 |
|
Love's Labour's Lost |
Emma Smith continues her Approaching Shakespeare series with a lecture on the play Love's Labour's Lost. |
Emma Smith |
27 May, 2015 |
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New Sappho and new libraries |
Fourth Lunchtime lecture accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. With Dr Dirk Obbink. |
Dirk Obbink |
19 May, 2015 |
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Four centuries of Chinese book collecting |
Third Lunchtime lecture accompanying the exhibition Marks of Genius: Masterpieces from the Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. With Mr David Helliwell. |
David Helliwell |
19 May, 2015 |
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The Trade in Printed Books: an ingenious innovation that changed the Western World |
Second in the Marks of Genius series, with Dr Christina Dondi |
Christina Dondi |
19 May, 2015 |
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Abridging Histories: Capt. James Cook and the Voyages of Reading (1784-) |
Professor Michael Suarez, in the Lyell Lectures 2015, urges scholars to remember the books that most readers encountered: the cheaper abridged versions of popular novels and accounts such as Cook's voyages. |
Michael Suarez |
18 May, 2015 |
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Naming Names: Underwriting Patronage in Tonson's Caesar (1712) |
Professor Michael Suarez, in the Lyell Lectures 2015, locates the visual sources of a famous illustrated edition of Caesar's works and comments on the social and political significance of the subscription plate book. |
Michael Suarez |
18 May, 2015 |
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Singular Multiples: Comprehending the General Evening Post (1754-86) |
Professor Michael Suarez continues the Lyell Lectures 2015, showing that archival evidence is necessary to understand the history of newspapers |
Michael Suarez |
18 May, 2015 |
|
Proliferating Images: Diagrams of the Slave Ship Brookes (1789) |
Professor Michael Suarez traces the transatlantic journey of a famous image deployed against the slave trade. |
Michael Suarez |
18 May, 2015 |
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True Colours: A Natural History of Louis Renard's Poissons (1719) |
Professor Michael Suarez continues the Lyell Lectures 2015, asking what role colour plays in bibliographical description? |
Michael Suarez |
18 May, 2015 |
|
Graham Greene and Josephine Reid |
Adam Smyth talks to Balliol College, Oxford archivist Anna Sander about an exciting new archive of letters relating to Graham Greene and his secretary, Josephine Reid. |
Adam Smyth, Anna Sander |
13 May, 2015 |
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Engraved Throughout: Pine's Horace (1733) as a Bibliographical Object |
Professor Michael Suarez gives the first Lyell Lecture of 2015. |
Michael Suarez |
8 May, 2015 |
|
Oxford Figures: 800 Years of the Mathematical Sciences |
Professor Robin Wilson, author of Alice's Adventures in Numberland, gives a talk on the history of studying Mathematics at Oxford, which is as old as the University itself. |
Robin Wilson |
6 May, 2015 |
|
The Lives of Harold Macmillan and Roy Jenkins |
Political biographers D R Thorpe and John Campbell speak about their subjects' careers culminating in the role of Chancellor of the University of Oxford. The discussion was chaired by Lord Patten of Barnes. |
D R Thorpe, John Campbell, Chris Patten |
14 November, 2014 |
|
Conscription and Conscientious Objection |
In this short talk Professor Martin Ceadel, Fellow and Tutor in Politics, New College, Oxford discusses the issue of military conscription and conscientious objection during the first world war. |
Martin Ceadel |
12 November, 2014 |
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The Problem with Propaganda |
Dr Adrian Gregory, Fellow and Tutor in History, Pembroke College, Oxford discusses the use of propaganda by all sides during the first world war. |
Adrian Gregory |
12 November, 2014 |
|
The Meaning of 1914 |
A conversation between Professor Sir Hew Strachan and Professor Margaret MacMillan, chaired by Professor Patricia Clavin. |
Hew Strachan, Margaret MacMillan, Patricia Clavin |
30 October, 2014 |
|