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ww2

Their Finest Hour

A Postcard from Hitler

The Project Lead, Dr Stuart Lee, discusses his most memorable finds on previous crowdsourcing projects
Their Finest Hour

Introducing 'Their Finest Hour'

A brief introduction by the project team to 'Their Finest Hour'
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures

Of all things broken and lost: Durs Grünbein’s Perspectives on Dresden and the problems of modern Elegy

Professor Karen Leeder delivers the inaugural Schwarz-Taylor Lecture
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Identity beyond Borders: Ethnicity in the American Pacific

Evan Matsuyama gives a short talk on Japanese mortality, identity, and ethnicity in the Nikkei struggle against mass incarceration during World War II.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

"Explosions" Part 1 - Oppenheimer: father of the atomic bomb

Professor David Wark, who was scientific adviser for the play ‘Oppenheimer’, explores the science and broad implications of one of the most explosive ideas in Human history: the atomic bomb.
European Studies Centre
Captioned

One century, three Polands: the Second Republic, People’s Poland, and the Third Republic

Prof Dariusz Stola, Director of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, gives a talk for the Programme on Modern Poland on 4th February 2015.
European Studies Centre

POMP Seminar Series 5

Vectors of Looking: Reflections on the Luftwaffe's aerial survey of Warsaw, 1944.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Modernist Writing and Modernist Events: Fictions of Holocaust

Often described as one of the most important historical theorists of our times, Hayden White discusses the ethical and aesthetic implications for discourses dealing with the Holocaust, genocide and industrialized death.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

Saul Friedländer: Trends in the historiography of the Holocaust

Professor Saul Friedländer delivers a lecture as the inaugural Humanitas Visiting Professor in Historiography.
Oxford LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) History Month Lectures

Alan Turing: The One Who Became a Zero

Andrew Hodges (author of Alan Turing: The Enigma) delivers a lecture on Alan Turing, the founder of modern computer science. This is the third annual lecture for LGBT history month.
Wadham College

Alan Turing: The One Who Became a Zero

Andrew Hodges (author of Alan Turing: The Enigma) delivers a lecture on Alan Turing, the founder of modern computer science, as part of LGBT month.
The History of Science Museum

Interview: Peter Scott on Marconi and Radio Manufacturing

Professor Peter Scott discusses his research into competitive advantage and innovation in the interwar British radio industry using the Marconi Archive, Britain's most extensive and important archive for the radio and related industries.
The History of Science Museum

Radio Manufacturing in the Interwar Years

Professor Peter Scott (University of Reading) presents the inaugural Douglas Byrne Marconi Lecture based on his research on Marconi and radio manufacturing between the World Wars.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

The Legacy of Nuremberg

Delivered by Benjamin Ferencz, Chief Prosecutor of the Einsatzgruppen Case at the Nuremberg Trials, 1947-8. Part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminar Series, Trinity 2010.
Alumni Weekend

Havens across the Sea

Local historian Ann Spokes Symonds gives a talk on the Oxford children and mothers who were evacuated to Canada and the USA in July 1941.

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