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literature

Alumni Weekend

Medieval Romance and the Gift of Narrative

Dr Perkins gives a talk for the 2013 Oxford Alumni Weekend.
Alumni Weekend

The Secret Mathematicians

Professor Marcus du Sautoy (New College), Charles Simonyi Chair in the Public Understanding of Science, author and broadcaster gives a talk for the 2013 Oxford Alumni Weekend.
Alumni Weekend

Writing Contemporary Fiction: From Inspiration to Publication

James Benmore (Kellogg), Samantha Shannon (St Anne's) and Sam Thompson (St Anne's) talk about their work as writers. Chaired by Dr Clare Morgan (Kellogg), author and Director of the Master of Studies in Creative Writing.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Fitzgerald beyond Gatsby

With the recent resurgence in interest in F. Scott Fitzgerald following Baz Luhrmann's imaginative film adaptation of Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby have come the inevitable cliches of the 'lost generation' and the 'American dream'.
Valentine's Day at Oxford

Love and Sex in Victorian Fiction

Victorian fiction is commonly thought of as treating love sentimentally and lacking all reference to sex. In this talk drawing on material from a book he is writing, Dr David Grylls, Fellow of Kellogg College, will contest such a view.
St John's College

Language and Medieval literature.

The President of St John's College, Professor Margaret Snowling, in conversation with Dr Carolyne Larrington, Supernumerary Fellow in English at St John's. They discuss Carolyne's interest in medieval English literature.
Cultural Connections: exchanging knowledge and widening participation in the Humanities

10.Greg Walker in conversation with Jonathan Bate.

Cultural Connections conversation. Greg Walker asks Jonathan Bate to reflect on his motivation for engaging with many activities and publics beyond the academic.
Challenging the Canon
Captioned

Why should we study Chaucer?

Dr Laura Ashe of Worcester College, Oxford, discusses her current research and proposes why we should still study Chaucer.
Challenging the Canon
Captioned

Why should we study Shakespeare?

Dr Emma Smith of Hertford College, Oxford, discusses her current research and proposes why we should still study Shakespeare.
Challenging the Canon
Captioned

Why should we study Dickens?

Dr Robert Douglas-Fairhurst of Magdalen College, Oxford, discusses his current research and proposes why we should still study Dickens.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

03 Lire Sade avec Rousseau

This lecture is in French. Third lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

The Domain of the Poem: Lyric, Sign, Meaning and Rhythm in Contemporary Ars Poetica (4)

Don Paterson, acclaimed poet, gives the fourth and final lecture for Humanitas lecture series on Comparative European Literature.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

The Domain of the Poem: Lyric, Sign, Meaning and Rhythm in Contemporary Ars Poetica (3)

Don Paterson, acclaimed poet, gives the third lecture for Humanitas lecture series on Comparative European Literature.
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge

The Domain of the Poem: Lyric, Sign, Meaning and Rhythm in Contemporary Ars Poetica (2)

Don Paterson, acclaimed poet, gives the second lecture for Humanitas lecture series on Comparative European Literature.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

09 Le paradigme homosexuel chez Sade

This lecture is in French. Ninth and final part of the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

08 Obscenity off the Scene: Sade's La Philosophie dans le Boudoir

This lecture is in English. Eighth lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

07 Sade, homme de lettres

This lecture is in French. Seventh lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

06 Sade, nouvelle classique 'British'

This lecture in French. Sixth lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

05 Le libertinage du lecteur. La question de l'identification chez Sade

This lecture is in French. Fifth lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.
Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques

04 Sade subversif et immoral? Le préjugé de l'intentionnalité

This lecture is in French. Fourth lecture in the Sade, l'inconnu? Nouvelles approaches critiques conference.

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