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

May
5
Mon
Deconstruction and Biblicism @ The Mitre (function room)
May 5 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Deconstruction as Old Testament midrash, with New Testament implications.

Valentine Cunningham is a University Lecturer (CUF) in English, Professor of English Language and Literature and Vice-President of Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford. He has previously served as Dean of Corpus as well as Chair of the Oxford English Faculty, and was made a titular Professor of English Language and Literature in 1996. He works widely across literary-historical-cultural periods, areas and genres, as well as in literary theory. Originally and still a Victorianist, he has edited the Blackwells Anthology of Victorian Poetry and Poetics, Adam Bede (Oxford World Classics) and Reading Victorian Poetry Now (forthcoming, 2011). He maintains a strong interest in fiction, especially more recent fiction including Joyce, Virginia Woolf and Iris Murdoch. A main research interest has been and remains the literature of the 1930s, not least the writing of the Spanish Civil War. In more recent times, he has published extensively on musico-literary topics, on Theology- and Bible-and-Literature, as well as in literary theory.

Upstairs, in the function room, at the Mitre. 7:30pm with drinks and nibbles served from 7pm.

Please share the event with anyone who might be interested.

May
6
Tue
The History of Champagne in the UK: 1860 – 1914 @ Senior Common Room, Faculty of Law
May 6 @ 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
Joan Anim-Addo@St Anne’s Arts Week @ Tsuzuki Lecture Theatre, St. Anne's College
May 6 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Joan Anim-Addo@St Anne's Arts Week @ Tsuzuki Lecture Theatre, St. Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

Professor of Caribbean Literature and Culture at Goldsmiths University, Joan Anim-Addo brings us her voice on Black Women’s Writing and the place of the Black figure in the Humanities. This event will be hosted in connection with Oxford ACS.

Modernist Avant-Gardes and Technology @ Pegasus
May 6 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

In the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, a persistent interest in technology emerged in both avant-garde and mainstream literature, and this multimedia presentation by Dr Eric White (Oxford Brookes University) and collaborators examines how radical reading and writing pushed the boundaries of technology into fascinating, and sometimes disturbing, new spaces (ages 12+).
Part of the Oxford Brookes University OutBurst festival at Pegasus, 6-10 May 2014. #OutBurst2014

May
7
Wed
Weapons of mass migration @ SR 1, Department of International Development
May 7 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Subtitle: Forced displacement, coercion and foreign policy

Seminar by Professor Kelly M. Greenhill (Tufts University)

Part of the Refugee Studies Centre Trinity term Public Seminar Series

Blake Morrison@St. Anne’s Arts Week @ Mary Ogilvie Foyer, St. Anne's College
May 7 @ 4:30 pm
Blake Morrison@St. Anne's Arts Week @ Mary Ogilvie Foyer, St. Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

Writer of autobiography, poetry, fiction and journalism and Professor of Creative and Life Writing at Goldsmiths University Blake Morrison brings some of his latest work and interesting discussion to St. Anne’s.

The Avatar as Terrorist @ Pegasus
May 7 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Professor Roger Griffin (Oxford Brookes University), author of ‘Terrorist’s Creed’, will draw upon actual examples of terrorist attacks and a number of films in this talk to help explain why ‘ordinary’ individuals carry out violent attacks, and what possibilities might exist for deradicalization (for years 14+).
As part of the Oxford Brookes University Festival, Outburst, at Pegasus, 6-10 May 2014. #OutBurst2014

May
8
Thu
Dear Mr Darwin’: what can we learn from 19th century citizen science? @ Oxford Martin School
May 8 @ 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Dear Mr Darwin’: what can we learn from 19th century citizen science? @ Oxford Martin School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Professor Sally Shuttleworth, Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford and Dr Sally Frampton, Postdoctoral Research Assistant at the University of Oxford, will both talk about the role of Citizen Science in their AHRC Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries project.

The project uses the framing of ‘Citizen Science’ to consider how ‘public’ participation in science was understood in the nineteenth century. The project brings together historical and literary research in the nineteenth century with contemporary scientific practice, looking at the ways in which patterns of popular communication and engagement in nineteenth-century science can offer models for current practice.

Radical Publishing with PEN @ Pegasus
May 8 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Join English PEN (the literary network which works to defend and promote free expression) for an evening of poetry and debate, with discussion about how publishing and human rights campaigns can join forces to help writers from across the world (ages 15+).
As part of the Oxford Brookes University Festival, Outburst, at Pegasus, 6-10 May 2014. #OutBurst2014

Ali Smith@St. Anne’s Arts Week @ Mary Ogilvie Lecture Theatre, St. Anne's College
May 8 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Ali Smith@St. Anne's Arts Week @ Mary Ogilvie Lecture Theatre, St. Anne's College | Oxford | United Kingdom

Novelist Ali Smith, author of Artful, Hotel World, and The Accidental, returns to St. Anne’s after holding the Weidenfeld Visiting Professorship in European Comparative Literature in 2012.

William Kelly: Artist of Conscience @ Ashmolean Museum
May 8 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
William Kelly: Artist of Conscience @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

William Kelly: Artist of Conscience
Thursday 8 May 2014, 6.30-7.30pm (drinks from 6.15pm)

Ashmolean Museum Education Centre
(Evening entrance via St Giles)

Internationally acclaimed US artist William Kelly talks about his life and work. Kelly’s varied career has seen him work as a taxi driver and a welder, before he went on to become a Fulbright Scholar and Dean at the Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne. Today Kelly is known as a painter and printmaker and an artist of conscience, committed to a humanist approach in his creative practice. Part of the Why Art Matters series.

Booking essential – £8/£7
http://www.oxfordplayhouse.com/ticketsoxford/#search=Conscience

Divided Brain and Spiritual Sense of Scripture @ The Sutro Room, Trinity College
May 8 @ 7:15 pm – 8:15 pm
Divided Brain and Spiritual Sense of Scripture @ The Sutro Room, Trinity College | Oxford | United Kingdom

The spiritual and second-order sense of scripture, according to which, for example, the crossing of the Red Sea denotes Baptism, and Jacob’s ladder denotes the cross, presents at least two epistemological challenges. First, the history of interpretation suggests that some kind of collective judgment has been made between acceptable and unacceptable interpretations, but the rules for making these judgments are unclear. Second, for a variety of reasons, spiritual interpretations of specific persons, objects or events in scripture cannot add to theological knowledge through argumentation. A further challenge, that the spiritual sense depends on belief in providential special divine action (SDA), ought not to exclude the study of this interpretation according to its own principles but may have contributed to a comparative neglect of this topic. Despite its historical popularity and influence, recent academic work on the spiritual sense has therefore been limited.

In this seminar, I examine the spiritual sense in the light of recent work in neuroscience. I argue that although particular spiritual interpretations are dependent on a body of pre-existing theological propositions, and cannot add to these propositions directly, this does not mean that these interpretations lack cognitive value. On the contrary, the spiritual sense is the fruit of a kind of insight most commonly associated with the right hemisphere of the brain, associating embodied experiences with otherwise abstract theological statements and integrating such statements within shared narratives. I further examine work on partial brain dysfunction to underline the risks involved from a neglect of the spiritual sense, and consider practical implications for religious life.

Dr Pinsent is Research Director of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion, a member of the Theology and Religion Faculty at Oxford University and a research fellow of Harris Manchester College. He was formerly a physicist at CERN, has degrees in philosophy and theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University and a second doctorate, in philosophy, from St Louis University. He is the author of The Second-Person Perspective in Aquinas’s Ethics: Virtues and Gifts, and a wide range of other publications on virtue ethics, neurotheology, science and religion, the philosophy of the person, divine action, and the nature of evil.

THIS SEMINAR WILL BE HELD AT THE SUTRO ROOM, TRINITY COLLEGE AT 8:30PM, PRECEDED BY DRINKS AT 8:15PM.

May
9
Fri
Art as a Vehicle for Transformative Justice @ Seminar Room C, Manor Road Building
May 9 @ 11:00 am – 12:30 pm

speakers:
William Kelly, Artist and Humanist

Dr. Rama Mani, Senior Research Associate at the Centre for International Studies at the University of Oxford and Councillor of the World Future Council

Between the artist and the museum @ Ashmolean Museum
May 9 @ 3:45 pm – 5:30 pm

Between the artist and the museum

Friday 9 May 2014, 5-6.30pm (doors will open at 4.45pm)

Ashmolean Museum Headley Lecture Theatre

A symposium with Michael Govan (Humanitas Visiting Professor in Museums, Galleries & Libraries at Oxford University) and Vik Muniz (Artist). Chaired by Paul Hobson (Director, Modern Art Oxford).

Free admission but booking is essential.
http://www.humanities.ox.ac.uk/humanitas/museums-galleries-libraries

The History of Parliament – Chris Bryant MP @ Mansfield College
May 9 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Labour MP for Rhondda since 2001. Shadow Minister for Welfare Reform since October 2013. Author of several books including Parliament: The Biography. Part of the Mansfield Lecture Series, convener Baroness Helena Kennedy QC

The Cheerful Companion @ Pegasus
May 9 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Step inside the parlour and drawing room of an eighteenth-century home, and together with Dr Nicole Pohl (Oxford Brookes University) and musicians, enjoy readings, music, and the authentic sewing session of a ‘huswif’!
Part of the Oxford Brookes University OutBurst festival at Pegasus, 6-10 May 2014. #OutBurst2014

May
10
Sat
India: A Short History @ Ashmolean Museum
May 10 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
India: A Short History @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

India: A Short History
With Andrew Robinson, author

Saturday 10 May, 2-3pm, Headley Lecture Theatre

India is the world’s largest democracy and a fast-growing economy. It is also a civilization with roots more than four thousand years old, including the technically advanced cities of the Indus Valley, the Buddha, Hindu dynasties, the Mughal Empire, and the British Raj. This lecture looks at individuals, ideas, and cultures, as well as the rise and fall of kingdoms, political parties, and economies.

Tickets £5/£4
http://www.ashmolean.org/events/Lectures/?id=132

Philosophy in the Dungeon @ Pegasus
May 10 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Led by David Aldridge, an academic philosopher, educationalist and experienced role-playing enthusiast, this evening is intended for curious or experienced gamers alike to sample Dungeons and Dragons, celebrating collaborative storytelling and raising serious questions about ethics, metaphysics, and our own potential as human beings (ages 16+).
Part of the Oxford Brookes University festival, Outburst, at Pegasus, 6-10 may 2014. #OutBurst2014

Time to Change: Creative Writing and Mental Health @ Pegasus
May 10 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm

A collaboration between the Oxford Brookes Poetry Centre and the Archway Foundation (an Oxford-based mental health charity), this event will feature writing produced by the Archway Foundation’s services during workshops with Brookes’ creative writing students.

May
12
Mon
Places of Religion in Contemporary Society @ Roy Griffiths Room, ARCO Building
May 12 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Places of Religion in Contemporary Society @ Roy Griffiths Room, ARCO Building | Oxford | United Kingdom

In this lecture series, Naomi Richman explores the evolution of the ideas central to major global belief-systems such as Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Judaism and Marxism, and their status in the modern world from a social-scientific and secular perspective.

6 Lectures run on Mondays starting the 12th May.
6-7pm, Roy Griffiths Room. ARCO Building, Keble College.
Free, open to all, and followed by discussion.

Weeks 1 and 2: Christianity and Secularisation. Week 3: Buddhism. Week 4: Judaism. Week 5: Islam. Week 6: Marxism, Nationalism and Scientific Humanism

For more information, contact Dr Bea Prentiss,

May
13
Tue
A view from the Pacific:re-envisioning the art museum @ Ashmolean Museum
May 13 @ 3:45 pm – 5:30 pm

A view from the Pacific: re-envisioning the art museum

Tuesday 13 May 2014, 5-6.30pm (doors will open at 4.45pm)

Ashmolean Museum Headley Lecture Theatre

A lecture by Michael Govan (Humanitas Visiting Professor in Museums, Galleries & Libraries at Oxford University). Chaired by Professor Christopher Brown (Director, Ashmolean Museum). The event will be followed by a drinks reception to which members of the audience are warmly invited.

Free admission but booking is essential.
http://www.humanities.ox.ac.uk/humanitas/museums-galleries-libraries

Transitional Justice and Transitional Relativism @ Seminar Room B, Manor Road Building
May 13 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Speaker:
Professor James Sweeney, Professor of International Law, University of Lancaster

May
14
Wed
Tour: Joseph Beuys & Jörg Immendorff @ Ashmolean Museum
May 14 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Tour: Joseph Beuys & Jörg Immendorff @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

Tour: Joseph Beuys & Jörg Immendorff
With Colin Harrison, Senior Curator of European Art

3–3.45pm on Wednesday 14 May and Wednesday 11 June

Tours are free, no booking is required. Please meet in Gallery 2.

http://www.ashmolean.org/exhibitions/details/?exh=92

May
15
Thu
Base of the Pyramid Markets @ The Launchpad
May 15 @ 11:30 am – 12:30 pm

Join us for a lunchtime talk by Geoff Kistruck – Associate Professor and Ron Binns Chair in Entrepreneurship at Schulich School of Business, York University. Geoff’s primary research interests involve social entrepreneurship and innovation, principally within the context of poverty alleviation efforts in base-of-the-pyramid markets.

His talk will focus on Base-of-the-Pyramid (BOP) markets and how they present significant governance challenges when undertaking large-scale investments. In the absence of strong legal institutions, organizations must design creative solutions for ensuring that local partners adhere to their agreements. Drawing upon social interdependence theory, his talk will propose that the use of alternative goal structures will serve to motivate local partners to fulfil their commitments.

King Arthur: a study in feudal legend @ The Mitre
May 15 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Short talk followed by questions and discussion. All welcome.

May
16
Fri
Magic Museums At Night @ Ashmolean Museum
May 16 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Magic Museums At Night @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

Magic Museums at Night

Special Ashmolean Late Night Opening
Friday 16 May
7–10pm

FREE ENTRY

For 2014’s Museums At Night event, the Ashmolean is putting on an evening of magic. Curators will be presenting the magical and mystical objects of the collection while visitors are invited for magic shows and workshops, tarot reading, stargazing, flamenco dance and more.

https://www.facebook.com/events/448472011951907/

May
17
Sat
Magnificence, Love and Scaffolds: Politics at the Court of Henry VIII @ Ashmolean Museum
May 17 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Magnificence, Love and Scaffolds: Politics at the Court of Henry VIII @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

Magnificence, Love and Scaffolds: Politics at the Court of Henry VIII, With Dr Suzannah Lipscomb
Saturday 17 May, 11am–12pm, Ioannou Centre

Historian, author, and broadcaster Dr Suzannah Lipscomb will speak on the politics of spectacle, persuasion, magnificence, and the politics of love at the court of Henry VIII. The court revolved around the splendid person of the king himself. And although politics was the only game worth playing, it was a dangerous game, ‘for the most part’, Sir Thomas More observed, ‘played on scaffolds’.

Tickets £8/£7
http://www.oxfordplayhouse.com/ticketsoxford/#search=Magnificence

May
18
Sun
Special Ceramics Demonstration and Talk @ Ashmolean Museum
May 18 @ 9:30 am – 2:30 pm
Special Ceramics Demonstration and Talk @ Ashmolean Museum | Oxford | United Kingdom

Clay Live – Special Ceramics Demonstration
With Clive Bowen and Dylan Bowen

Sunday 18 May, 10.30am-3.30pm
Ashmolean Museum Education Centre

Slipware specialists, father and son, Clive and Dylan Bowen demonstrate their work and talk about what has influenced their pottery.

£25/£20 concessions, booking essential.
http://www.oxfordplayhouse.com/ticketsoxford/#search=clay

May
19
Mon
A lost generation? Education opportunities for Syrian refugee children in Lebanon @ Department of International Development
May 19 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Speaker: Dr Maha Shuayb (Centre for Lebanese Studies)

Description:

Since the beginning of the Syrian crisis in 2011, more than 3 million refugees have fled to the neighboring countries Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt. According to the last regional response plan, it is estimated that the number of Syrian refugees in need of assistance across the region reached 3.45 million by the end of 2013. In Lebanon, the number of Syrian refugees has soared to over a million, 630,000 of them are between the ages of 3–18 years.

Syrian refugee children face a number of barriers in trying to access the educational system in Lebanon. The language of instruction poses difficulties for Syrians in coping with host country curricula: the Syrian national curriculum is solely in Arabic, whereas the Lebanese system includes English and French both as subjects and as languages of instruction for maths and science. The impact of all of these conditions on students’ education retention and opportunities to continue higher education is yet to be seen.

This talk will focus on access and quality of education offered to Syrian refugee children in Lebanon. The initial findings of the ongoing study of public, private and UNRWA schools that have Syrian students have highlighted numerous challenges facing Syrian children including discrimination, violence, acculturation and lack of support in the classroom. With the increase of the scale of the crisis, and hostilities toward the Syrian refugees, the Lebanese Ministry of Education and Higher Education has already started to adopt an exclusory approach to the education of the refugees by banning new Syrian children from registering in public schools, whilst putting pressure on UN agencies to sponsor afternoon school shifts for Syrian students only.

About the speaker:

Maha Shuayb is the director of the Centre for Lebanese Studies (CLS). She is also a visiting fellow at the Faculty of Education at the University of Oxford and the president of the Lebanese Association for History. Maha joined CLS in 2008 as a senior research fellow at St Antony’s. In 2012, Maha became the director of the Centre.

Maha has a BSc in Sociology from the Lebanese University and a PhD degree in Education from the University of Cambridge. She was a visiting scholar at various universities including University of Cambridge and the American University of Beirut.

Maha’s research focuses on the sociology and politics of education. Her research area include education and social cohesion, refugee education, citizenship education and history education. Her most recent publications are: Rethinking Education for Social Cohesion: International Case Studies (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) and ‘The art of inclusive exclusions educating Palestinian refugee students in Lebanon’ (Refugee Survey Quarterly, forthcoming).

May
20
Tue
Legal, Narrative and Artistic Approaches to Transitional Justice @ Seminar Room D, Manor Road Building
May 20 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

ESRC Transitional Justice Research Manual Re-Launch

Speakers:
Dr Nicola Palmer, Lecturer in Criminal Law, King’s College London
Dr Briony Jones, Senior Researcher, Dealing with the Past, swisspeace
Dr Zoe Norridge, Lecturer in English and Comparative Literature, King’s College London