Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

history

AI image of vegetables and the series title

Utopia and Terror: How interdisciplinary methodologies can help us understand violent societies. The example of Croatian Ustasha regime

Part of the Cantemir Institute seminar series. Rory Yeomans, senior research analyst at the Ministry of Justice, gives a talk on how interdisciplinary methodologies help us understand violent societies.
AI image of vegetables and the series title

Bygone Glories and Frivolous Pleasures: The Rococo Revival and National Identity in Austrian and Hungarian Art, 1840-1860

Part of the East and Est-Central Europe Seminar series. Dr Nóra Veszprémi (Cantemir Fellow, Budapest) gives a talk on art and identity in Austria and Hungary in the mid 19th Century.
AI image of vegetables and the series title

Henry II and the Twelfth-Century World

Dr Elizabeth Gemmill introduces the most remarkable monarch, Henry II, whose dominions stretched from the south west of France to the north of Britain. His achievements have lasted until our own times, but his reign was marred by tragedy too.
Department for Continuing Education Open Day 2012

Henry II and the Twelfth-Century World

Dr Elizabeth Gemmill introduces the most remarkable monarch, Henry II, whose dominions stretched from the south west of France to the north of Britain. His achievements have lasted until our own times, but his reign was marred by tragedy too.
First World War: New Perspectives

Wartime Art and Grief

German women and the aesthetics of loss portrayed through art during the First World War.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

European authors and Russian nuns. An Enlightened girl takes a monastic oath

8/8. Andrei Zorin (Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, Oxford) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

Intervention in space and affirmation of self: the ethics of improvement

7/8. Andreas Schönle (Queen Mary, University of London) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

How Should Theatre Work? The Question of Audience

6/8. Alexei Evstratov (Université Paris-Sorbonne) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

The Enlightenment in the Correspondence of Catherine the Great and Friedrich Melchior Grimm

5/8. Kelsey Rubin-Detlev (Ertegun House, Oxford) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

Voltaire in St Petersburg: The Voltaire Library and the Marginalia Project

4/8. Gillian Pink (Voltaire Foundation, Oxford) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

Picking over the pieces, or Diderot in St. Petersburg: Zeitgeist? accident? or one more bit in a puzzle?

3/8. Marian Hobson (Queen Mary, University of London) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

Religious dogma versus scientific progress: Enlightenment issues in 18th c. Russia

2/8. Alexander Iosad (Cantemir Institute, Oxford) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
Was there a Russian Enlightenment?

Was there a Russian Enlightenment? What's the problem and why does it matter?

1/8. Andrew Kahn (Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, Oxford) delivers a talk for "Was there a Russian Enlightenment?", a one-day seminar held at Ertegun House, Oxford in November 2012.
AI image of vegetables and the series title

Ireland: forced migration history, forced migration empathy?

Public Seminar Series, Michaelmas term 2012. Seminar by Dr Irial Glynn (University College Dublin) recorded on 31 October 2012 at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford.
First World War: New Perspectives

Conflict Culture

How much do we really know about the experience of the average individual soldier?
First World War: New Perspectives

The Better Part of Valour

Combatant Courage on the Western Front.
First World War: New Perspectives

Surplus Women

The First World War and its impact on emigration, work and marriage.
First World War: New Perspectives

The Indian Sepoy in the First World War

The role of India and the Indian Sepoy in the First World War.
First World War: New Perspectives

Rethinking British Volunteerism in 1914: A Rush to the Colours?

The British response to the outbreak of War in 1914.
AI image of vegetables and the series title

Majorities and Minorities in Interwar Timişoara: Between Fictive and Ethnicity and Ideal Nation

Professor Victor Neumann (West University of Timisoara) delivers a lecture as part of the East and East-Central Europe Seminar Series at the Cantemir Institute.

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 18
  • Page 19
  • Page 20
  • Page 21
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Login
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford