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culture

Digital Visual Cultural

Episode 1: introducing digital - visual - cultural

Welcome to this series of podcasts designed to give you an insight into the University of Oxford’s digital - visual - cultural series of events.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Art and Political Thought in Medieval England

Book at Lunchtime: Art and Political Thought in Medieval England c.1150-1350
African Studies Centre
Captioned

The earth compels: Forces of destruction and creation in the history of African popular culture

Prof Karin Barber delivers keynote lecture for 'Cultural Production in Africa's Extractive Communities' workshop
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Women Making History: The Leaders of Today – roundtable discussion chaired by Victoria Tandy, Co-Founder of the Women Leaders in Museums Network

‘Women Making History: The Leaders of Today’ is a roundtable session exploring the presence of women in senior roles in heritage organisations, at the Women and Power conference which took place on the 6th and 7th March 2019.
Anthropology

A petition to kill: efficacious appeals against big cats in India

Nayanika Mathur (Oxford) delivered this Anthropology Departmental Seminar on 5 May 2018
Anthropology

The concept of culture in cultural evolution

The Keynote speech by Tim Lewens (Professor of Philosophy of Science, Cambridge) for the Cultural Evolution Workshop held at the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford, on 28 February 2017
Israel Studies Seminar

Haim Yacobi - Israel, Africa: Identity, Culture and Politics

Haim Yacobi (UCL) gives a talk on Israel in Africa, Africa (and Africans) in Israel.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Imagining the Divine: Art and the Rise of World Religions

Mary Beard and Neil MacGregor in conversation
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Late Victorian into Modern

Book at Lunchtime, Late Victorian into Modern
Anthropology

The concept of culture in cultural evolution

In his keynote speech for the Cultural Evolution Workshop (held in the Pitt Rivers Museum on 28 February 2017), Prof. Tim Lewens of Cambridge examines the concept of culture in cultural evolution.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Literature Beyond Literary Studies: Intermediality and Interdisciplinarity

With Professor Ben Morgan (Professor of German) and Peter Hill (Junior Research Fellow in Arabic Literature, Christ Church College), chaired by Karoline Watroba (DPhil candidate in German and Comparative Criticism).
History of Art: Undergraduate Course Lectures
Captioned

Jan Brueghel and his Views of Italian Ruins

This lecture forms part of a series entitled "Antiquity After Antiquity" and is for first year Undergraduate History of Art students. It was delivered at the University of Oxford History of Art Department.
Anthropology

Profane relations: the irony of offensive jokes in India

Andrew Sanchez (Kent) discusses why a multi-ethnic workforce in eastern India exchanges jokes about each other's religion and cultures as a form of irony (19 February 2016)
Renegotiations of History in light of the 'Greek Crisis'

Far-right blogging and migration: discourses and aesthetics

Ismini Sioula-Georgoulea (Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences), gives the first talk in the fourth panel 'Continuities and Ruptures': The 'Crisis' as a new period in Greek history?
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Politics with a focus on Yemen

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 2: Why is this happening? Understanding ISIL and other Islamist extremism. With Dr Noel Brehony (Chair of CBRL).
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

The Silk Roads: A New History of the World

Peter Frankopan discusses his new book with Averil Cameron, Robert Moore and Elleke Boehmer
Openness at Oxford

Open Data in the Humanities

Jacob Dahl, Associate Professor of Assyriology at the Faculty of Oriental Studies, talks about his research with cuneiform tablets and his hopes for the future of Open Data in the Humanities.
Teaching to Transgress

The Poems were my Dance: Speaking Histories, Cultural Subjectivities, and the Embodies Writer in Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze’s? The Fifth Figure

Emma Kelley presents her Master's thesis entitled 'The Poems were my Dance: Speaking Histories, Cultural Subjectivities, and the Embodies Writer in Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze’s ?The Fifth Figure'
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Artificial Intelligence' part 3 - Understanding how we learn language

Professor Kim Plunkett explains how neuroscientists use artificial intelligence as a tool to model processes in the brain – in particular to understand how infants acquire language.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Artificial Intelligence' part 2 - How to create machines that learn

Professor Nando de Freitas explains that understanding how our brains work has helped us create machines that learn, and how these learning machines can be put to completing different tasks.

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