Trinity 2023 French Graduate Seminar: ‘Of Underworlds and Other Worlds: The Subterranean in Eighteenth-Century French Literature’ | ‘“C'est classique!!”: Defending Naturalism in the Trial of Lucien Descaves’

30th May 2023, 5:15 pm - 6:30 pm

TUESDAY 30 MAY 2023 17:15-18:30

Ian Boyd (Queen’s College, University of Cambridge): ‘Of Underworlds and Other Worlds: The Subterranean in Eighteenth-Century French Literature’

Isabel Maloney (Clare College, Cambridge): ‘“C'est classique!!”: Defending Naturalism in the Trial of Lucien Descaves’

 

 

The French Graduate Seminar takes places fortnightly and is convened by Hannah Scheithauer (hannah.scheithauer@queens.ox.ac.uk) and Roger Navas i Solé (roger.navas@trinity.ox.ac.uk).

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided.

 

ALL WELCOME!

Trinity 2023 French Graduate Seminar: ‘Chants de la Terre: a pastoral reading of Senghor's poetic oeuvre’ | ‘Cosmetic Surgery? Gathering the (In)Complete Works of Jean Molinet (1531)’

16th May 2023, 5:15 pm - 6:30 pm

TUESDAY 16 MAY 2023 17:15-18:30

Amber Bal (Cornell University): ‘Chants de la Terre: a pastoral reading of Senghor's poetic oeuvre’

Jack Nunn (Exeter College): ‘Cosmetic Surgery? Gathering the (In)Complete Works of Jean Molinet (1531)’

 

The French Graduate Seminar takes places fortnightly and is convened by Hannah Scheithauer (hannah.scheithauer@queens.ox.ac.uk) and Roger Navas i Solé (roger.navas@trinity.ox.ac.uk).

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided.

 

ALL WELCOME!

Trinity 2023 French Graduate Seminar: ‘Dolet, Rabelais, Paré: Medicine and Literature in Early Modern France’ | The Importance of Interdisciplinarity: Working with Disability Studies and Crip Theory’

2nd May 2023, 5:15 pm - 6:30 pm

TUESDAY 2 MAY 2023 17:15-18:30 at the Wharton Room, All Souls College, Oxford

Rachel Hindmarsh (Trinity College): ‘Dolet, Rabelais, Paré: Medicine and Literature in Early Modern France’

Sarah Phillips (Sorbonne Université): ‘The Importance of Interdisciplinarity: Working with Disability Studies and Crip Theory’

 

The French Graduate Seminar takes places fortnightly and is convened by Hannah Scheithauer (hannah.scheithauer@queens.ox.ac.uk) and Roger Navas i Solé (roger.navas@trinity.ox.ac.uk).

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided.

 

ALL ARE WELCOME!

Trinity Term French Graduate Seminars

French Graduate Seminars at All Souls College, Oxford. 

The French Graduate Seminar takes places fortnightly and is convened by Hannah Scheithauer (hannah.scheithauer@queens.ox.ac.uk) and Roger Navas i Solé (roger.navas@trinity.ox.ac.uk).

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided.

 

ALL WELCOME!

 

Events in this series

History of War Seminar Series 2023

ALL ARE WELCOME!

 

Week 2 (Wednesday 3 May 2023):

Andrew Thompson (Oxford): International Law and Wars of Liberation: Rethinking Human Rights at the End of Empire. 

Wharton Room, All Souls College

 

Week 4 (Wednesday 17 May 2023):

David Parrott (Oxford): title tbc

Wharton Room, All Souls College

 

Events in this series

Sir John Hicks Memorial Lecture in Economic History

25th April 2023, 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Professor Leandro Prados de la Escosura

(Universidad Carlos III, Madrid)

 

“Well-Being Beyond GDP: What Does Economic History Tell Us?”

 

Tuesday 25 April 2023, 17:00

The Old Library, Front Quad, All Souls College

Followed by a drinks reception at 18:30

 

If you would like to attend, either in person or on Zoom,

please email sheilagh.ogilvie@all-souls.ox.ac.uk

Catastrophes in Context: The Archaeology of Catastrophes from the 1st–8th Centuries CE in the Mediterranean Region

17th - 18th April 2023, 9:15 am - 6:00 pm

Old Library, All Souls College

An OxREP-UrbNet conference

Organisers: Rubina Raja (Aarhus University) and Andrew Wilson (University of Oxford)

See and download the conference programme here

Register here (registration required)

 

Inaugural lecture on Atlantic Slavery and its Aftermaths

The inaugural lecture in the series on Atlantic Slavery and its Aftermaths was given by Professor Paul Gilroy FRSL FBA (UCL) on 8 March.

A recording of his lecture, on ‘Race-thinking and the Half-life of Atlantic Slavery’, can be accessed here.  

These lectures are sponsored by All Souls College and will be an annual event.

The Lee Lecture in Political Science and Government, by Anne Applebaum

26th April 2023, 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm

Examination Schools

Anne Applebaum

Anne Applebaum, Journalist, historian

They Didn't Understand Anything, Just Spoiled People's Lives": Brutality, Incompetence and Historical Echoes in Russian-occupied Ukraine

Anne Applebaum is a journalist, a prize-winning historian, a staff writer for The Atlantic and a senior fellow at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University, where she co-leads a project on 21st century disinformation and co-teaches a course on democracy. Her books include Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine; Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe 1944-1956; and Gulag: A History, which won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for non-fiction. Her most recent book is the New York Times bestseller, Twilight of Democracy, an essay on democracy and authoritarianism. She was a Washington Post columnist for fifteen years and a member of the editorial board; she has also been the deputy editor of the Spectator and a columnist for several British newspapers. Her writing has appeared in the New York Review of Books, The New Republic, the Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy, among many other publications.

The lecture is the nineteenth in a series funded by a generous benefaction from Dr S. T. Lee, who has funded lectures in the humanities all over the world.

There will be a wine reception after the lecture.

Registrations are compulsory. Please fill out the form here: https://forms.office.com/e/tzpbV61h1H

 

Climate Protection, Energy Security, Geopolitics: Squaring the Circle

All Souls College

From 7–8th December 2022, All Souls College held a public symposium on climate protection, energy security, and geopolitics. This followed a proposal in 2019 to increase academic activity around climate change from its Climate Working Group. In the last few years, it has become apparent that the transition away from a fossil fuel-based economy poses deep challenges for individuals, companies, and countries. The aim of the symposium was to leverage the College’s strengths to bring together diverse perspectives from public life and a variety of academic fields: climate science, economics, law, politics, social science.

We discussed how climate change and violent conflict have been related in the past with implications for the future, and how the new UK Office for Environmental Protection holds Government to account for its climate goals. We also saw the scale of military emissions, hearing how climate change might be classified as a national security issue, and we heard how the economic and political history of China shapes its decision making on climate and geopolitics today.

We further heard about environmental justice from the perspective of the global south and how diplomacy plays a vital role in the transition to “Net Zero”. We also heard contrasting views on the role climate litigation plays in holding governments, countries, and individuals to account for their present and historic emissions.

Looking at long versus short-term thinking, we heard about the history and future of climate litigation and the challenges of communicating and achieving “Net Zero”. We also learned about the economics of climate change mitigations in the short and long term and the emphasis we should place on the needs of future generations.

We hope the meeting provided a platform for future discussions and collaborations among speakers and delegates. We thank the speakers and chairs, as well as our colleagues at Oxford Net Zero for their help in organising this event.

 Organisers

Ross Anderson, Wolfgang Ernst, Miriam Meyerhoff, Srikanth Toppaladoddi

Speakers

Speakers in the session on equity and justice. Left to right: Chuks Okereke (Alex-Ekwueme Federal University Nigeria), Jessica Omukuti (Oxford Net Zero), Benjamin Franta (Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment), Gerhard Wagner (Humboldt-University Berlin).

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