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Anthropology

Fifty years of Cameroon unification: controversies and archival echoes

A special lecture in Oxford by Professor Verkijika G. Fanso from the University of Yaounde in Cameroon
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Shakespeare and the Lower Register of Constitutional Thought

Professor Denis Galligan, Professor of Socio-Legal Studies, Oxford will deliver this lecture as part of the new programme on Law, Film and Literature from the Foundation for Law, Justice and Society podcast series
Keble College

Mathematics Aspects of the Planet Earth

Professor José Francisco Rodrigues, Lisbon/CMAF, delivers the ASC Complexity Cluster Lecture entitled 'Some Mathematical Aspects of Planet Earth' at Keble College.
Latin American Centre

Challenging Frontiers: On the Making—and Unmaking?—of Latin American Nations (especially Mexico).

Alan Knight (St Antony’s College) gives a talk for the Latin American Centre seminar series.
Oh What a Lovely War? First World War Anniversary Lectures

1914–1918: Was Britain Right to Fight?

The Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, Canon of Christ Church, and author of In Defence of War (2013) analyses Britain's belligerency in terms of Christian just war reasoning, and concludes that it was justified.
Oh What a Lovely War? First World War Anniversary Lectures

Victorious Donkeys? British Generals and Generalship of the First World War Reconsidered

The Professor of War Studies at Wolverhampton University, a leading British military historian of the First World War, explodes some myths about British generalship and the performance of the British Army.
Oh What a Lovely War? First World War Anniversary Lectures

Accident or Choice? The Outbreak of the First World War

The causes of the First World War have long been controversial and remain so. The Warden of St Antony's College, Oxford, and author of The War that Ended Peace (2013) brings us up to date on the debate.
Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies

Cultural Diversity and the law: From the Perspective of Cultural Policy

Mr Ryu Kojima , Kyushu University. gives a talk for the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies Seminar Series
Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies

Britain and Japan; Reflections on the bilateral relationship

Sir David Warren , Chair man, The Japan Society, gives a talk for the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies Seminar Series
Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies

Transnational History and Japan

Professor Garon, Nissan Professor of History and East Asian Studies , Department of History, Princeton University, gives a talk for the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies Seminar Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

TORCH Book Series: ‘Thomas Wyatt - The Heart’s Forest’ by Susan Brigden

David Starkey, Chris Stamatakis and Diarmaid MacCulloch discuss ‘Thomas Wyatt - The Heart’s Forest’ by Susan Brigden as part of the TORCH Book Series
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Embodying song in Early Modern England

Katherine Larson (University of Toronto) gives a talk on music in Early Modern England accompanied by Lutenist Matthew Faulk
Rothermere American Institute

The Hopkins Touch: Harry Hopkins and the Forging of the Alliance to Defeat Hitler

David Roll's portrait of Hopkins discusses his early life and career, but emphasizes his role alongside FDR (and later Truman) in World War II, making use of previously private diaries and letters.
Alumni Weekend

Socrates and 'The Hemlock Cup'

This lecture, based on the recent biography by Bettany Hughes, looks at Socrates' life, following in his footsteps across Greece and Asia Minor and examining the new archaeological discoveries that shed light on his world.
Isaiah Berlin

The Origins of Cultural History: 1 – Two Notions of the History of Culture: The German versus the French Tradition

Isaiah Berlin gives the first of his Gauss Seminars at Princeton University on 'The Origins of Cultural History', 19 February 1973
Isaiah Berlin

The Origins of Cultural History: 2 – Geisteswissenschaft and the Natural Sciences: Vico versus Descartes

Isaiah Berlin gives the second of his three Gauss Seminars at Princeton University on 'The Origins of Cultural History', 20 February 1973
Isaiah Berlin

The Origins of Cultural History: 3 – The Origins of the Conflict: Political Lawyers, Classical Scholars, Narrative Historians

Isaiah Berlin gives the third of his three Gauss Seminars at Princeton University on 'The Origins of Cultural History', 22 February 1973
First World War: New Perspectives

Shot at Dawn

How a contemporary photographer is addressing one of the conflict's most sensitive topics.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Do bones have politics? Forensic knowledge, human remains and the politics of the past

Dr. Claire Moon (Senior Lecturer, Department of Sociology and the Human Rights Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science) gives a talk for the OTJR seminar series.
History Faculty

1968 Then and Now

Professor Robert Gildea, Lecturer in History in Oxford, gives the Eighth Oxford Historians' Alumni Lecture on his research on political activists in Europe in the 1960s and their experiences during this time.

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