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Diplomacy and International Relations

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Add to Calendar Diplomacy and International RelationsThe Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Location
The Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Speakers
Sir Tim Hitchens
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Recommended
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.

We have never needed diplomacy and good international relations as much as we do now. The immediate challenges of the Ukraine war and the existential challenges of climate change require the most effective international collaboration. Paulo de Souza will be talking to Wolfson President Sir Tim Hitchens about his 35 years’ experience as a professional diplomat, and the importance of diplomacy to avoid conflict. Please join us for a masterclass and a chance to explore the role of diplomacy in helping resolve some of the world’s most pressing issues.

Sir Tim Hitchens, Wolfson's president, will explore some questions on the topic of diplomacy and international relations, firstly in a conversation with the chair of the college's Green Team, Paulo de Souza, and then with the audience.

If you are unable to attend in you can watch the event live on our YouTube channel here

Annina Schmid

Associate Professor in Clinical Neurosciences
annina.schmid@ndcn.ox.ac.uk
+44 01865 223254
Nuffield Department of Clinical NeurosciencesJohn Radcliffe HospitalWest Wing Level 6Headley WayOX39DUOxfordUnited Kingdom

I head the Neuromusculoskeletal Health and Science Lab (https://www.ndcn.ox.ac.uk/research/neuromusculoskeletal-health-and-science-lab) at the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences at Oxford University. Our research focusses on advancing our understanding of the pathophysiology of entrapment neuropathies with the ultimate aim to develop precision physiotherapy and improve management for these patients. My group uses entrapment neuropathies as unique model systems that allow the prospective evaluation of nerve injury and repair in the context of neuropathic pain. We use a range of methodologies including deep clinical phenotyping with quantitative sensory testing and neurophysiological methods. I have also been at the forefront in developing advanced neuroimaging methods to visualise peripheral nerves at ultra-high field strength (MR neurography). In addition, we use a range of technologies (e.g., RNA sequencing, qPCR, specialised histology) to study the cellular and molecular aspects of entrapment neuropathies. This multimodal and innovative approach allows a detailed understanding of the mechanisms underlying entrapment neuropathies and neuropathic pain in general. We also have a special interest in the physiotherapeutic management of neuropathic pain, entrapment neuropathies and other neuromusculoskeletal conditions with the ambition to develop precision physiotherapy for these patients.

Neuropathic pain, entrapment neuropathies, physiotherapy, peripheral nerve imaging

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The War in Ukraine: a foreign policy perspective

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Add to Calendar The War in Ukraine: a foreign policy perspectiveThe Buttery
Location
The Buttery
Speakers
Mr Simon Smith CMG
Contact name
Presidents Office
Contact email
presidents.office@wolfson.ox.ac.uk

Simon Smith, former British Ambassador in Kyiv (2012-15) and Foreign Office Russia Director, will speak in the Buttery on Thursday 12th May at 6.00pm about the war in Ukraine, the complex relations between Russia and Ukraine, and possible outcomes. He will be pleased to take questions at the end of his presentation. Introduced by the President, Tim Hitchens.

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Wolfson May Day Musical Celebrations

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Add to Calendar Wolfson May Day Musical CelebrationsThe Hall
Location
The Hall
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
Come to the Wolfson May Day musical celebrations!

A festival of Wolfson music and poetry to mark the arrival of summer.

All Wolfson community welcome.

In the Hall, 11.00am to noon, Sunday 1st May.

Free pastries, coffee and tea.

Families welcome.

Language and Culture in Contemporary Ukraine

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Add to Calendar Language and Culture in Contemporary UkraineThe Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Location
The Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Speakers
Dr Jan Fellerer and Professor Julie Curtis
Contact name
Alumni and Development Office
Contact email
alumni.office@wolfson.ox.ac.uk

Our two short presentations will explore aspects of language and of culture (particularly contemporary drama) in Ukraine. As the world now understands, the country's rich historical diversity, encompassing Ukrainian, Russian and other languages, is integrating into one multifaceted linguistic and cultural space. We will illustrate these processes with reference to developments over the last ten years or so, followed by questions from the audience.

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Berlin Lecture 2022

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Add to Calendar Berlin Lecture 2022The Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Location
The Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Speakers
Prof Ato Quayson
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.

The Isaiah Berlin Lecture was launched in 1990 to celebrate the 80th birthday of the College's Founding President, Sir Isaiah Berlin, made possible thanks to an endowment gift from the Rothschild Foundation. The lecture traditionally takes place each Trinity term and is in Berlin’s own field of study, the history of ideas. Past speakers include Professor Amartya Sen, Professor Roy Foster, Professor Timothy Garton Ash, Michael Ignatieff and Baroness Helena Kennedy.

The next Berlin Lecture will take place at 6pm on Thursday 19 May (Thursday in Week 4) with Professor Ato Quayson, Stanford University, who will be delivering a lecture entitled ‘Disputatiousness and Unruly Affective Economies: From the Greeks to Postcolonial Tragedy’ (abstract below).

We invite everyone to join us at the lecture in the Leonard Wolfson Auditorium where seating will be available with and without social distancing. Guest Night will follow in Hall, bookable via the Wolfson Gateway in the usual way.

The lecture will also be livestreamed on YouTube for those who cannot attend in person, link to follow on the website when the glitch with the event’s listing has been fixed. Those who attend in person are asked to consider wearing a face covering.

Abstract:

Disputatiousness and Unruly Affective Economies: From the Greeks to Postcolonial Tragedy

This lecture will pick up on an element of literary tragedy that was raised in Tragedy and Postcolonial Literature but was not fully elaborated, namely, the place of disputatiousness in the history of tragic form and how this might help us to understand tragedy in world literature.  The Greeks give us great examples of disputatiousness: Oedipus vrs. Tiresias, Clytemnestra vrs Agamemnon, Medea vrs Jason, and Antigone vrs Creon, among others.  But the determining mark of the Greek tragic characters was what might be described as their zero-sum wrath.  Their sense of rightness goes as far as courting possible self-destruction. 

My understanding of this mode of disputatiousness is different from what Hegel lays out in his discussion of tragedy in The Phenomenology of Spirit and Lectures on Aesthetics. Rather, I side with Jean Pierre-Vernant in reading Greek tragedy as illustrating the incomplete transition between religious and ethical discourses, such that concepts such as dikē (justice), nómos (law and custom), and ethos (the fundamental character or spirit of a culture) all come to do double service and are thus articulated by individual characters as the subjects of life-and-death disagreements. 

Disputatiousness takes on a different guise in Shakespeare, where the more disputatious plays such as Coriolanus and Titus Andronicus are not considered among his most profound.  Rather, in the big tragedies of Hamlet, King Lear, Othello, Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra, historical disputatiousness is aligned to unruly affective economies.  It is the link between the two domains of history and affect that marks Shakespeare as modern and from which we can derive a model for understanding the characterological types and their socio-political conditions in postcolonial tragedy. 

The lecture will proffer a broad theory of postcolonial tragedy drawing examples from different literary traditions and cultures, but will specifically focus on the rural novels of Chinua Achebe (Things Fall Apart and Arrow of God), Toni Morrison’s Beloved, and the work of JM Coetzee, among others.

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Carry Akroyd: Found in the Fields - Exhibition Preview

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Add to Calendar Carry Akroyd: Found in the Fields - Exhibition Preview
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
You are invited to the preview of an exhibition of serigraphs and lithographs by Carry Akroyd relating to poetry by John Clare.



Small refreshments and words from the artist at 12noon accompanied by a reading from a Clare poem.



The exhibition continues until 22 June 2022.

The Wolfson 1966 Fund Giving Day

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Add to Calendar The Wolfson 1966 Fund Giving Day The College Café
Location
The College Café
Booking Required
Not Required
Contact name
Wolfson Alumni and Development Office
Contact email
alumni.office@wolfson.ox.ac.uk

As we watch with horror the crisis in Ukraine, we are holding a special Giving Day on 11–12 May to allow Wolfson to provide a home to refugee scholars fleeing the catastrophe in Ukraine or other conflict zones around the world.

We will devote any additional funds secured to:

• Scholarships to allow students to pursue research at Oxford, whatever their financial means.
• Research and travel awards, enabling students to share their work at conferences or do essential lab- or field-work.
• Hardship bursaries for students in unexpected financial distress.
• Assistance with nursery fees for students with children at Wolfson Nursery.
• Better sports, welfare, and wellbeing facilities to support students’ physical and mental health, and to foster Wolfson’s special esprit de corps.
• Enhanced library facilities, to ensure Wolfsonians have the latest resources they need.

The Giving Day will be a 36-hour fundraising challenge for the whole Wolfson community – alumni around the world, students, fellows and staff.

There will be special events in College on both days:

Wednesday 11 May

  • Row-a-thon: 9am - 9pm
  • Bake sale: 10am - until everything is gone
  • Lunchtime talk by Dr Jan Feller and Professor Julie Curtis 'Language and Culture in Contemporary Ukraine': 1 - 2pm


Thursday 12 May

  • Row-a-thon: 9am - 9pm
  • 'The War in Ukraine: a foreign policy perspective': 6 - 7pm
  • Last day of online auction: closes at 9pm
     

Learn more about the campaign here.

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Carry Akroyd: Found in the Fields

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Add to Calendar Carry Akroyd: Found in the Fields
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
An exhibition of serigraphs and lithographs by Carry Akroyd relating to the poetry of John Clare.



Open daily 10am - 7pm subject to College commitments. Visitors are advised to telephone the College Lodge on (01865) 274100 before visiting, especially if travelling a distance.
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Elsa Gomis: My Exile is Yours

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Add to Calendar Elsa Gomis: My Exile is Yours
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.

Filmmaker Elsa Gomis’s work explores visual forms which challenge dominant representations of marginalized populations. Working at the crossroads of migrations studies and art, Gomis’s research focuses on all dimensions of exile, from the political to the personal. My Exile is Yours presents four films exploring this theme.



Elsa Gomis is a filmmaker, Postdoctoral Research Assistant at the Oxford Department of Politics and International Relations, and Visiting Researcher at Maison Française, Oxford.



Marble Hall, Wolfson College, Linton Road, Oxford, OX2 6UD

free admission, open daily