Some face-to-face events are returning. Check carefully for any requirements.

Oct
22
Thu
Introductory Coin-Handling Session at the Ashmolean’s Heberden Coin Room @ Heberden Coin Room, Ashmolean Museum
Oct 22 @ 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm

What’s the deal about coins? How do I read them? What can I do with them? Join us for an introductory coin-handing session at the Heberden Coin Room, where Jerome Mairat demonstrates how we can read coins and how this information can be useful to us. The session includes looking at a few case studies so everyone will have a chance to read and decipher coins!

This event should interest you if:

• you don’t know much about numismatics, but are curious to find out more about its charms and/or its usefulness to research;
• you are doing a course (e.g. History and Joint Schools, Classics, Anthropology etc.) that may require you to come into contact with numismatics, or would like to do research related to numismatics;
• you want to find out more about the Ashmolean’s resources, how the museum may assist you with research or your interest in coins, and how you may access its archives.

Places are limited so e-mail qaleeda.talib@some.ox.ac.uk to reserve a spot.

Free for members; £2 fee for non-member. Contact the Secretary at kim.zhang@wadh.ox.ac.uk to be a member and sign up to the mailing-list. Membership is free.

Nov
5
Thu
Counterfeiting in Colonial British Africa @ Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies
Nov 5 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Come listen to a curator with the Smithsonian Institute, Dr. Ellen Feingold, talk about the ongoing fascinating ‘Money in Arica’ project at the British Museum, which aims to piece together African monetary history and its cultural and political impact. Dr. Feingold will also speak on her own focus of counterfeit currencies in colonial East and West Africa. The lecture will be held at the Ioannou (Classics) Centre on St. Giles.

This event should interest you if:

• you wish to know more about various numismatics research projects;
• you wish to know more about a unique and rare field of numismatics (African numismatics);
• you wish to know more about using numismatics as a source for research.

Speaker profile: http://americanhistory.si.edu/profile/1159
Abstract:

During the interwar period, international counterfeiting schemes originating in West Africa presented a new threat to British colonial and national currencies. The institutions responsible for the West African monetary system – the Colonial Office and West African Currency Board – believed these plots had the potential to generate high quality forged currency and thus considered them to present a greater risk than local counterfeiting practices. This paper argues that colonial officials were also alert to this illicit activity because the schemes presented a new challenge to British law enforcement in the colonies, set off disputes between national and imperial institutions in London, and required the British to collaborate with other nations to thwart. The emergence of these international counterfeiting schemes demonstrates that while the creation of a colonial monetary system for West Africa facilitated British imperial economic aims, it also created new and unanticipated challenges to British rule.

Please contact qaleeda.talib@some.ox.ac.uk for more information.

Free for members; a £2 fee applies for non-members. Please contact the Secretary at kim.zhang@wadh.ox.ac.uk if you wish to be a member and sign up to the mailing-list. Membership is free.

Nov
10
Tue
Architectural Psychology in Theory and Practice – Talk by Prof Byron Mikellides @ Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology
Nov 10 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Architectural Psychology in Theory and Practice - Talk by Prof Byron Mikellides @ Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Wine reception, snacks, and £5 year membership to PsyNAppS available. Alternatively, pay £2 for a single event!

Venue: Lecture Theatre B, Department of Experimental Psychology

********************

How do individuals and groups react to different environmental situations (home, office, hospital, street, shop, and so on)? What psychological processes are triggered by our environment, and how do they affect our perception, attitude and actions? How can individuals and groups change their environment so that it provides a more stimulating, less stressful and more enabling setting in which to live? How are our identities tied up with place? How might sustainability in environmental policy be better informed by current research?

Byron Mikellides is currently Emeritus Professor at the School of Architecture, Oxford Brookes University, where he has been teaching since 1968. He has published several influential books including Colour for Architecture (1976),with Tom Porter, Architecture for People (1980) and Colour for Architecture Today (2009),with Tom Porter. He has also contributed to several books, scientific journals and papers over the years, and lectured extensively in various countries particularly in USA and Scandinavia. He is also a former member of Directors of IAPS (International Association of People Environment Studies), a committee member of the Colour Group of Great Britain and an Honorary member of the Portugal Colour Group. He organised the Exhibition of Antonio Gaudi, in Oxford in 1983 and the ‘Colours of Savannah’ in Georgia, USA in 1996 for the Olympic Games.

His latest works include chapters in books such as Building Happiness (2010) on architectural psychology and Colour Design – Theory and Applications (2012).

********************

Psychology and Neuroscience Applications Society

The junction where psychology and neuroscience research meets action and innovation.

PsyNAppS aims to disseminate information about what you can do with your psychology or neuroscience degree and research. We are here to tell you everything Freud hasn’t. We want to show you how psychology and neuroscience can be applied practically to a variety of industries.

Nov
19
Thu
Creative Cloud Event – Free Talk – For Photographers, Designers and Film Makers @ Film Oxford
Nov 19 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Creative Cloud Event - Free Talk - For Photographers, Designers and Film Makers @ Film Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

Adobe specialists Richard Curtis and Niels Stevens are coming to Film Oxford for a special presentation on the new features of Creative Cloud for photographers, designers and film makers.

Don’t miss this opportunity to see the latest features in the new release of Adobe Creative Cloud 2015, including Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere, After Effects, Speedgrade and more. Learn about what’s new in this 2015 release that will help you do everything you do more efficiently using the latest innovations and modern standards. Get answers to your questions and get inspired by film makers and photographers who are creating amazing work.

Dec
12
Sat
Taster Day – A Sneak Peek of The Knowledge Project’s Courses! @ Linacre College
Dec 12 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm
Taster Day - A Sneak Peek of The Knowledge Project's Courses! @ Linacre College | Oxford | United Kingdom

The Knowledge Project is an amazing social enterprise that provides fantastic evening courses in central Oxford on a variety of unique subjects, from Understanding China to What the Ancients Did for Us. All of TKP’s profit goes to our partner charity, Jacari. So please pop into our Taster Day NEXT SATURDAY to have a look at the courses on offer from the new year!

Jan
12
Tue
2015 Archaeological Findings of Westgate Shopping Centre with Ben Ford @ Key Learning Centre @ Oxford Castle
Jan 12 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Join Ben Ford as he speaks about the 2015 archaeological excavations from under the Westgate Shopping Centre @ Key Learning Centre, Oxford Castle.

Jan
27
Wed
Nuneham in the Oxford Landscape with Julian Munby @ Key Learning Centre @ Oxford Castle
Jan 27 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Listen to Julian Munby, from Oxford Archaeology and an OPT Trustee, as he speaks about Nuneham in the Oxford landscape.

Feb
12
Fri
Dabke dancing workshop @ Union Hall - JHBB - Oxford Brookes University GB
Feb 12 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Dabke dancing workshop @ Union Hall - JHBB - Oxford Brookes University GB | Oxford | United Kingdom

Workshop with writer and performer Ahmed Masoud.
It follows his reading and performance of Home/Less.You can book tickets for the performance here.

Dabke (Arabic: دبكة‎) is a modern Levantine Arab folk circle dance of possible Canaanite or Phoenician origin. It is a dance performed in the Palestinian Territories, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, and north Saudi Arabia . It is a form of both circle dance and line dancing and is widely performed at weddings and joyous occasions. The line forms from right to left. The leader of the dabke heads the line, alternating between facing the audience and the other dancers.

Feb
13
Sat
Life-Writing Workshop: on the theme of ‘Emotional Lives’ with Dame Prof. Hermione Lee and Prof. Patrick Hayes @ Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College
Feb 13 @ 9:30 am – 4:45 pm

This Workshop will focus on the challenges that life-writers face in constructing narratives about their own or their subject’s emotional lives. It is intended for postgraduate students working in life-writing as well as professional or non-professional life-writers, irrespective of the stage of their research. Amongst other life-writing-related issues, the Workshop will deal with: ways in which we might approach writing about relationships, how we tackle the difficulties of narrating and interpreting emotional states when documentation might be unreliable, or non-existent, and how we might negotiate the changing interpretation and memory of emotional responses to people and past events over time. The Workshop will be led by renowned life-writers Hermione Lee and Patrick Hayes, Elleke Boehmer and Kate Kennedy. All delegates are asked to bring a short piece of text (anything from a poem to a tweet) that captures something of their own emotional life, or that of their subject.

Feb
18
Thu
‘Urban governance and its discontents’ Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College
Feb 18 @ 9:00 am – 4:15 pm
'Urban governance and its discontents' Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

As a cornerstone initiative of the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities, we are proposing a new format for presenting and elaborating thinking on what urban governance does, when it succeed and fails, and how it can be re-organized to meet the challenges of the 21st century. We put academics on the cutting edge of global urban scholarship face-to-face with established innovative practitioners—architects, activists, policy makers, and artists.

Through a series of rigorous yet accessible public dialogues they will grapple with the intellectual and everyday implications of their theories and practices on cities to produce visionary but grounded research and intervention strategies for the future of city life.
Each debate will be preceded by a small panel of academics and practitioners presenting papers that speak to the same key issues. Building on the long-standing Oxford tradition of public debate, we hope to encourage productive engagement between intellectuals and practitioners that is too often missing from discussions of the city.

Feb
19
Fri
‘Urban governance and its discontents’ Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College
Feb 19 @ 9:00 am – 4:15 pm
'Urban governance and its discontents' Oxford City Debates @ St Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

As a cornerstone initiative of the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities, we are proposing a new format for presenting and elaborating thinking on what urban governance does, when it succeed and fails, and how it can be re-organized to meet the challenges of the 21st century. We put academics on the cutting edge of global urban scholarship face-to-face with established innovative practitioners—architects, activists, policy makers, and artists.

Through a series of rigorous yet accessible public dialogues they will grapple with the intellectual and everyday implications of their theories and practices on cities to produce visionary but grounded research and intervention strategies for the future of city life.
Each debate will be preceded by a small panel of academics and practitioners presenting papers that speak to the same key issues. Building on the long-standing Oxford tradition of public debate, we hope to encourage productive engagement between intellectuals and practitioners that is too often missing from discussions of the city.

Mar
17
Thu
7 Steps to Become a Data Scientist @ L2, Mathematical Institute University of Oxford Andrew Wiles Building
Mar 17 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
7 Steps to Become a Data Scientist @ L2, Mathematical Institute University of Oxford Andrew Wiles Building  | Oxford | United Kingdom

If you’re wondering whether the academic path is right for you, but cannot imagine wasting the technical skills you’ve developed in academia, you might want to consider a career in data science, ‘the sexiest job of the 21st century’ according to Harvard Business School.

In this talk, ASI co-founder Marc Warner will discuss how you acquire the remaining 10% of skills needed to excel in industry and the key lessons learned from the ASI’s selective data science Fellowship, which has taken over 50 PhD students to the cutting-edge of industry.

If you know any friends or colleagues who may be interested, please help spread the word to them.

Really look forward to seeing you there.

Apr
14
Thu
Transforming Innovations into Social Enterprises in the Developing World: Global Shapers Lecture with Saif Kamal @ Oxford Internet Institute
Apr 14 @ 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm
Transforming Innovations into Social Enterprises in the Developing World: Global Shapers Lecture with Saif Kamal @ Oxford Internet Institute | Oxford | United Kingdom

The Oxford Hub of the World Economic Forum’s Global Shapers invites you to a new lecture with Saif Kamal (Founder of Toru & Curator of the Dhaka Hub of the Global Shapers). Saif is visiting Oxford to speak at the Skoll World Forum and has kindly agreed to give another lecture on the challenges and opportunities of building social innovations in the developing world.

Saif has been a leader in the transformation of innovations to social enterprises in Asia, having founded the first social innovation hub in Bangladesh that connects development sector challenges to young innovators and incubates them on design and sustainability to transform ideas to social enterprises. Has has had an illustrious global career in knowledge management, consumer goods and media. Saif returned to Bangladesh to empower youth and help local innovation ecosystem thrive. He is also a Cordes fellow and founder of the British High Commission’s Young Leaders Bangladesh. For his work in building an integrated social innovation ecosystem, Saif was recently awarded as a New Champion (2015 -16) at World Economic Forum’s Summer Davos China.

Venue: Seminar room, Oxford Internet Institute, 1 St Giles, OX1 3JS (note the change of venue!)
Date: 14. April 2016, 12:30-13:30

You can read a recent interview with Saif Kamal here:
http://icebusinesstimes.net/transforming-innovations-into-social-enterprises/

Find out more about Toru’s innovation ecosystem:
http://toru-bd.org/

The Global Shapers Community is an initiative of the World Economic Forum – a network of Hubs developed and led by young people who are exceptional in their potential, their achievements and their drive to make a contribution to their communities.

Apr
20
Wed
Unlocking Archives: #DIYDigitization @ Balliol College Historic Collections Centre, St Cross Church
Apr 20 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Unlocking Archives: #DIYDigitization @ Balliol College Historic Collections Centre, St Cross Church | Oxford | United Kingdom

Prof. Daniel Wakelin and Anna Sander in conversation with Oxford MSt students about creating, using and sharing images of medieval manuscripts, during a lunchtime break in a hands-on MS handling and photography workshop day. What can’t digital images tell us? What metadata do we need? What can only be learned from the original manuscript? What information is only available from digital images? Do professional and amateur manuscript images have different uses? What practical considerations govern photography of ancient, irreplaceable books under reading room conditions? Lunchtime discussion is open to all.

May
27
Fri
Making the most of digitized books and manuscripts: a free IIIF workshop @ Centre for Digital Scholarship, Weston Library
May 27 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm
Making the most of digitized books and manuscripts: a free IIIF workshop @ Centre for Digital Scholarship, Weston Library | Oxford | United Kingdom

Learn about new digital tools for humanities research and build your own virtual workspace for viewing books and manuscripts from libraries around the world in this short talk and workshop presented by Bodleian Library Systems and Services and the Centre for Digital Scholarship.

Since 2012, the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) has been enabling scholars to view, annotate and remix digitized images. The Bodleian has been in the vanguard of these developments, first with Digital.Bodleian, our IIIF-compatible digitized special collections website, and now with the Digital Manuscripts Toolkit, which will open up IIIF technology to humanities researchers with a set of easy-to-use tools. In this workshop, you will learn about the basic principles of IIIF, see the technology in action at the Bodleian and other institutions, and find out how to use free tools such as Mirador and the Universal Viewer in your own research. You will also have the opportunity to get involved in the development and testing of the Digital Manuscripts Toolkit.

Refreshments will be provided. Please bring your own laptops for the hands-on portion of this event.

Jun
8
Wed
Innovation Revolution: Exploring the Future of Publishing @ Art Cafe
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Innovation Revolution: Exploring the Future of Publishing @ Art Cafe | Oxford | United Kingdom

In such a competitive and fast-moving industry, what measures can publishers take to remain fresh and unique? Today, innovation in publishing goes far beyond the e-book.

From crowdfunding to creating book apps, to interacting directly with book-buyers, digital publishers are doing some inventive and original things to get their books to the top of your reading list. Xander Cansell, Head of Digital at Unbound and Anna Jean Hughes, Founder and Editorial Director of The Pigeonhole join us on the 8th June to discuss the importance of innovation in publishing, and reveal some of the exciting new ways to publish and connect with readers. Come along and discover what the future of publishing looks like!

Jun
24
Fri
May Morris Embroidery Workshop @ Ashmolean Museum
Jun 24 @ 10:00 am – Jun 25 @ 4:00 pm
May Morris Embroidery Workshop @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

Working in wools on a linen ground in the style of the Arts and Crafts designer May Morris, students will stitch a botanical motif suitable for a small cusion cover.

Oct
14
Fri
Elain Harwood: The Kenyon Building and Modernist University Architecture @ Mordan Hall, St Hugh's College
Oct 14 @ 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Elain Harwood: The Kenyon Building and Modernist University Architecture @ Mordan Hall, St Hugh's College | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Elain Harwood will look at David Roberts’s work in Cambridge and Oxford, and will place it in the context of the growth of higher education in the 1950s and 1960s, and the development of a modern style for university buildings.

Elain Harwood is Historic England’s specialist on post-war architecture and an acknowledged expert on and champion for Modernist architecture.

This event is part of the series A Festival of Anniversaries.

Jan
26
Thu
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School
Jan 26 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate

Mary Keen is a writer, lecturer and renowned garden designer and will talk about the garden, its dedicated gardeners, past and present, and her book, which celebrates the tradition of excellence at Eythrope.

Feb
7
Tue
Introduction to Restorative Practice Workshop @ The Mint House (Oxford Centre for Restorative Practice)
Feb 7 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Introduction to Restorative Practice Workshop @ The Mint House (Oxford Centre for Restorative Practice) | England | United Kingdom

This workshop increases understanding of conflict and wrongdoing from a restorative perspective and explores the principles and values underpinning a restorative approach.

Designed for professionals in the legal field, case referral managers, supervisors of restorative practitioners, and anyone supporting or working alongside restorative practitioners.

LED BY KATHERINE STROESSEL WHO HAS WORKED IN THE FIELD OF RESTORATIVE PRACTICE FOR OVER 20 YEARS IN THE UK, THE USA, WEST AFRICA, THE BALKANS AND EASTERN EUROPE AND SHE IS A REGULAR FACILITATOR AND TRAINER FOR THE THAMES VALLEY RESTORATIVE JUSTICE SERVICE. SHE IS PRIVILEGED TO WORK WITH THESE POWERFUL AND MEANINGFUL PROCESSES AND THEY UNDERPIN HER DEEP COMMITMENT TO RESTORATIVE APPROACHES AND THE PROFOUND DIFFERENCE THEY CAN MAKE TO PEOPLE’S LIVES.

Feb
18
Sat
OxFest’s 6th Annual Conference: Breaking Boundaries @ Mathematical Institute
Feb 18 @ 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
OxFest's 6th Annual Conference: Breaking Boundaries @ Mathematical Institute | England | United Kingdom

Studying or working in a science or engineering subject? Interested in how to close the gender gap, and want to hear great role models speak about their experiences?

Join Oxford Females in Engineering, Science and Technology (OxFEST), alongside OxWIB and OxWomIn, on Saturday 18th February for our annual conference at the Oxford Maths Institute! We’ll be hosting inspiring women from industry and academia who are breaking boundaries in their fields. The day will involve talks, workshops on diversity, entrepreneurship and communication, and a panel discussion on promoting women in STEM. Breakfast, lunch, refreshments and prosecco will be provided! This is a great opportunity to be inspired, add to your skills, make new connections and get involved.

We are proud to introduce our first speaker: Anne-Marie O. Imafidon MBE. Anne-Marie is a computing, mathematics and language child prodigy who graduated from Oxford aged 20 and was awarded an MBE for championing women in STEM in her organisation Stemettes. You can read about her recent thoughts on the glass ceiling here: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/…/the-glass-ceiling-is-made…

Like our Facebook page for more updates as we reveal our other amazing speakers: https://www.facebook.com/oxwomanempowerment/

Tickets are heavily subsidised and cost just £8 for the whole-day program and food and drink. Get yours here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/breaking-boundaries-shatteri….

We look forward to welcoming you on the day!

Feb
22
Wed
The deceit of ‘flourishing for all’: facing up to the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning” – Oxford Future of Cities seminar programme @ Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine
Feb 22 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
The deceit of ‘flourishing for all’: facing up to the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning” - Oxford Future of Cities seminar programme @ Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine | England | United Kingdom

Jonathan Metzger (KTH, Sweden) will talk about the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning.

Abstract: A more-than-human sensibility is founded upon an awareness of the fundamentally entangled fates of humans and non-humans, from the individual body to the planetary scale. The purpose of this presentation is to probe some of the implications of such insights on planning theory and methodology, and to explore potential ways of studying the degree to which such insights actually influence existing planning practices.

In the first part of the presentation I briefly review some currently fashionable ‘radical’ planning theories from the angle of how they may contribute to enacting a more-than-human sensibility within planning processes. I suggest that their oft-repeated ambition of producing benefits ‘for all’ are deceitfully misguiding, since such claims effectively serve the function of covering up the ever-present biopolitical dimension of planning practice and the radical exclusions that necessarily must take place.

In the second part of the presentation I sketch the outlines of a research program investigating how urban planning and design professionals relate to the more-than-human biopolitical dimension of planning. I argue that it is necessary to focus not only on the degree of displayed reflectiveness regarding this type of issues, but also if/how this comes to affect their concrete professional practice.

Feb
28
Tue
Lincoln Leads in Material Culture; Discussing ‘The Power of the Image’? @ Lincoln College
Feb 28 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Lincoln Leads in Material Culture; Discussing ‘The Power of the Image’? @ Lincoln College | England | United Kingdom

Lincoln Leads
In Material Culture

In conversation with
Robert Kerr • Former executive at Burberry •
Dr Joshua Thomas • Fellow in Archaeology •
Sarah Bochicchio • MSt in Modern History – Elizabeth I’s wardrobe

Discussing
‘The Power of the Image’?

Inviting the SCR, MCR, JCR and Alumni to join the conversation

Mar
8
Wed
An Introduction to Design for Beginners and Non-Designers @ Oxford Launchpad
Mar 8 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
An Introduction to Design for Beginners and Non-Designers @ Oxford Launchpad | England | United Kingdom

Limited spaces available so register now to secure your place:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/skills-workshop-an-introduction-to-design-tickets-32120337795

Working on a start up but lacking skills in design?
This session will help beginners and non-designers get comfortable with the basic principles of design (colour, typography, layout and psychology) and pick up the intangible skills that are hard to learn alone, but essential in coming up with fresh ideas, working with other creatives and designing with human behaviour in mind.

The main topics that will be covered are:

• FUNDAMENTAL DESIGN PRINCIPLES
A walkthrough of a design from start to finish to show how a designer comes up with and implements concepts, and a review of existing designs to see how colour, typography, layout and psychology are used and how these can be applied to your own work

• DESIGNING FOR A PURPOSE
A practical session to show the considerations and decisions a designer needs to make to fulfil an objective such as to communicate a message clearly, make something intuitive and easy to use, attract and guide attention and so on.

• HOW TO GET STARTED
A few short stories to demonstrate common mistakes beginners make and how to avoid them, how to come up with ideas and then translate them into an actual design, and ways to find opportunities to practise your skills

This workshop will be tailored to people with no or little previous design experience.

Check out previous workshops here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmfRPcybmAY

This workshop will be taught by Barney Yau. He has 8 years of design experience, started 3 design companies since he was 16, and has worked on over 200 projects with startups, SMEs and multinational corporations. He also taught design to over 500 students at Google Campus London, The London School of Economics, Imperial College London, The University of Warwick, Durham University and at HKUST for over 3 years, and have run private design sessions with startups, hackathons and incubator cohorts.

Apr
24
Mon
LGBT+ 101 @ Seminar Room, Radcliffe Humanities
Apr 24 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
LGBT+ 101 @ Seminar Room, Radcliffe Humanities | England | United Kingdom

Currently we are hearing more and more about LGBT+, and specifically transgender, people and issues in the press, media and everyday life. With terminology evolving at a fast pace and misinformation scattered around the internet, it can be hard to know what words mean and which are offensive / preferred. It can also feel impolite to ask or you may worry that you ‘should already know’ the answers to unanswered questions. What does it mean to be transgender? Is ‘queer’ offensive? What can I ask and what should I avoid? This LGBT+ 101 talk aims to answer some of those questions and will provide a safe space to ask more.

This session will be led by Dr Clara Barker (University of Oxford). Clara is a material scientist at Oxford University, following a four year post-doc at Empa, Switzerland. Last year she also became the vice-chair of the LGBT+ Advisory Group for the university and she volunteers at two Oxford LGBT+ youth and young adult groups. Clara also works with the Oxford County Council on various projects, including an anti-bully campaign for schools. In her spare time she blogs, writes for a music magazine, climbs, plays D&D and paints miniatures. Clara strongly believes in allowing people to be themselves and to be judged on what they do, not who they happen to be.

Lunch will be provided from 12.30-1pm. Talk and discussion from 1-2pm.

Apr
27
Thu
Living, Working & Playing with our Teenagers: A Restorative Approach @ The Mint House (adjacent to New Road Baptist Church)
Apr 27 @ 9:30 am – 4:30 pm
Living, Working & Playing with our Teenagers: A Restorative Approach @ The Mint House (adjacent to New Road Baptist Church) | England | United Kingdom

This one day workshop will explore the particular challenges, joys, and dynamics of working and living in a restorative way with young people in their teens. The values, language, and principles of restorative approaches contribute to building and maintaining positive and mutually respectful relationships. They offer more effective approaches to discipline and boundary setting. At a time when teenagers are going through so many changes our interactions with them are critical to the development of their identities and interests and potentially highly rewarding to our relationships with them.

Led by Katherine Stoessel who has worked in the field of restorative practice for over 20 years in the UK, the USA, West Africa, the Balkans and Eastern Europe and she is a regular facilitator and trainer for the Thames Valley Restorative Justice Service. She is privileged to work with these powerful and meaningful processes and they underpin her deep commitment to restorative approaches and the profound difference they can make to people’s lives.

May
27
Sat
Lives of Houses @ Wolfson College
May 27 all-day
Lives of Houses @ Wolfson College | England | United Kingdom

A one-day colloquium convened by Oliver Cox & Sandra Mayer, and hosted by OCLW in collaboration with TORCH will bring together academics, biographers and curators to explore the ways in which the life stories of well-known individuals are preserved and presented through the architecture and material culture of their homes. Talks on musicians’, architects’ and writers’ houses will focus on the intersections of life-writing and notions of fame and celebrity through physical spaces and objects. A plenary lecture by Daisy Hay on “Writing Space in Mr and Mrs Disraeli and Dinner with Joseph Johnson” and papers by:

• Gillian Darley (Sir John Soane)
• Lucy Walker (Benjamin Britten’s The Red House)
• James Grasby (Edward Elgar Birthplace)
• Alexandra Harris (William Cowper, John Clare and Virginia Woolf)
• Frankie Kubicki (Charles Dickens Museum)
• Nicola Watson (Shakespeare’s New Place)

Finally, a round table featuring Head of Specialist Advice for the National Trust, Nino Strachey, biographer and broadcaster Alexandra Harris, and art historian and curator Serena Dyer, the expert panel will cast a spotlight on the strategies available to those who open and present these houses to the public today.

Jun
3
Sat
Oxford Translation Day @ St Anne's and other venues across the city
Jun 3 @ 11:00 am – 8:00 pm
Oxford Translation Day @ St Anne's and other venues across the city | England | United Kingdom

Oxford Translation Day is taking place on the 3rd of June. We have an excellent line-up: women’s writing from the post-Soviet Baltic states; translation workshops; an achingly cool modern libretto, and MUCH MUCH MORE! Don’t dare miss out! All events are free but registration is required. More info about the programme and how to book here: http://www.occt.ox.ac.uk/oxford-translation-day-2017.

Jun
21
Wed
Citizen Jane: Battle for the City + Urban design in Oxford Q&A @ The Ultimate Picture Palace
Jun 21 @ 6:15 pm – 8:30 pm
Citizen Jane: Battle for the City + Urban design in Oxford Q&A @ The Ultimate Picture Palace | England | United Kingdom

A one-off screening of recent documentary release Citizen Jane: Battle for the City. The film will be followed by a panel discussion featuring four local experts talking about how the themes in the documentary relate to issues for our own city — both past and present.

The panel is made up of four women who will discuss the issues raised in the film from four different perspectives — urban planning, architecture, local history and art.

Dr Sue Brownill, an urban policy expert at Oxford Brookes University, will chair the discussion and will be joined by: Dr Annie Skinner, local historian and author of ‘Cowley Road: a History’; Dr Igea Troiani, Senior Lecturer in Architecture at Oxford Brookes; and Rachel Barbaresi, an artist with interest the social aspects of urban space whose work is currently on show at Modern Art Oxford’s Future Knowledge exhibition.

Sep
1
Fri
OUDCE Open Event (Day One) – Numerous free sessions on various topics @ Rewley House
Sep 1 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
OUDCE Open Event (Day One) - Numerous free sessions on various topics @ Rewley House | England | United Kingdom

Numerous free talks, walking tours and workshops over two days in central Oxford. Visit the webpage to find out more and book into sessions.