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1 FACULTY OF MODERN HISTORY Lecture List for Trinity Term 2005 NOTICE: non-members of the University may not attend university lectures (unless they are announced as open to the general public) without payment of a fee, otherwise than by personal invitation of the lecturer concerned. Persons who are neither reading for a qualification of this University nor otherwise exempt under special arrangements for certain categories of non-members, and who wish to attend lectures in any term, should apply to the Fees Clerk, University Offices, Wellington Square, Oxford OX1 2JD, who will provide information on the fee required. Senior visiting scholars from other universities who wish to attend lectures, seminars, or classes should normally approach the lecturer concerned directly, and not the Fees Clerk. Lectures begin on the first possible day after the beginning of Full Term (Sunday, 24 April) unless otherwise stated. Lectures will begin five minutes after the hour and finish at five minutes before the next hour. N.B. Lectures marked § have subtitles immediately below the main title. See page 15 for footnote references. Subject Lecturer Time Place SPECIAL LECTURES Writing Global History: the Middle East, Minorities, Drugs (hashish) and the New International Order in the 1920s (The Special Faculty Lecture) Prof. R. Owen (Harvard Univ.) F. 5 (wk 2: 6 May) Schools § Literary Life and Bookmarket in Germany under the Swastika 1933–45 (The Lyell Lectures in Bibliography) Prof. R. Wittmann (Univ. of Munich) T. Th. 5 (wks 1– 3) Taylor Lecture Theatre ‘The institutions’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 26 Apr. TLT ‘The authors’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 28 Apr. TLT ‘The publishers’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 3 May TLT ‘The books’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 5 May TLT ‘The readers’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 10 May TLT ‘The war’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 12 May TLT § Stalin and Hitler: Dictatorship and Social Catastrophe Prof. R. Gellately (Florida State Univ. and Bertelsmann Europeaum Visiting Professor in Jewish Politics and History in the Twentieth Century) M.T. Th. 5 (wk 4), M.T. W. Th. 5 (wk 5) Mansfield (M. wk 4, T. Th. wk 5), RAI (T. wk 4, M. W. wk 5) Centre for Hebrew & Jewish Studies (Th. wk. 4) ‘Stalin, Hitler and Ordinary Citizens’ Prof. Gellately M. 16 May Mansfield ‘The secret police and denunciations: the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany’ Prof. Gellately T. 17 May RAI ‘Nazi persecution of the Jews and German public opinion’ Prof. Gellately Th. 19 May Centre for Jewish and Hebrew Studies ‘Soviet and Nazi concentration camps’ Prof. Gellaltely M. 23 May RAI ‘Social outsiders under Communism and Nazism’ Prof. Gellately T. 24 May Mansfield ‘Stalinism “from below”: the voices of ordinary people Prof. Gellately W. 25 May RAI ‘The Nuremberg trials and beyond’ Prof. Gellately Th. 26 May Mansfield

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FACULTY OF MODERN HISTORY

Lecture List for Trinity Term 2005

NOTICE: non-members of the University may not attend university lectures (unless they are announced as open to the general public) without payment of a fee, otherwise than by personal invitation of the lecturer concerned. Persons who are neither reading for a qualification of this University nor otherwise exempt under special arrangements for certain categories of non-members, and who wish to attend lectures in any term, should apply to the Fees Clerk, University Offices, Wellington Square, Oxford OX1 2JD, who will provide information on the fee required. Senior visiting scholars from other universities who wish to attend lectures, seminars, or classes should normally approach the lecturer concerned directly, and not the Fees Clerk.

Lectures begin on the first possible day after the beginning of Full Term (Sunday, 24 April) unless otherwise stated.

Lectures will begin five minutes after the hour and finish at five minutes before the next hour. N.B. Lectures marked § have subtitles immediately below the main title.

See page 15 for footnote references.

Subject Lecturer Time Place

SPECIAL LECTURES Writing Global History: the Middle East, Minorities, Drugs (hashish) and the New International Order in the 1920s (The Special Faculty Lecture)

Prof. R. Owen (Harvard Univ.)

F. 5 (wk 2: 6 May)

Schools

§Literary Life and Bookmarket in Germany under the Swastika 1933–45 (The Lyell Lectures in Bibliography)

Prof. R. Wittmann (Univ. of Munich)

T. Th. 5 (wks 1–3)

Taylor Lecture Theatre

‘The institutions’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 26 Apr. TLT ‘The authors’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 28 Apr. TLT ‘The publishers’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 3 May TLT ‘The books’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 5 May TLT ‘The readers’ Prof. R. Wittmann T. 10 May TLT ‘The war’ Prof. R. Wittmann Th. 12 May TLT §Stalin and Hitler: Dictatorship and Social Catastrophe

Prof. R. Gellately (Florida State Univ. and Bertelsmann Europeaum Visiting Professor in Jewish Politics and History in the Twentieth Century)

M.T. Th. 5 (wk 4), M.T. W. Th. 5 (wk 5)

Mansfield (M. wk 4, T. Th. wk 5), RAI (T. wk 4, M. W. wk 5) Centre for Hebrew & Jewish Studies (Th. wk. 4)

‘Stalin, Hitler and Ordinary Citizens’ Prof. Gellately M. 16 May Mansfield ‘The secret police and denunciations: the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany’

Prof. Gellately T. 17 May RAI

‘Nazi persecution of the Jews and German public opinion’

Prof. Gellately Th. 19 May Centre for Jewish and Hebrew Studies

‘Soviet and Nazi concentration camps’ Prof. Gellaltely M. 23 May RAI ‘Social outsiders under Communism and Nazism’

Prof. Gellately T. 24 May Mansfield

‘Stalinism “from below”: the voices of ordinary people

Prof. Gellately W. 25 May RAI

‘The Nuremberg trials and beyond’ Prof. Gellately Th. 26 May Mansfield

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Subject Lecturer Time Place Why Harriot was not the English Galileo (The Thomas Harriot Lecture)

Dr J. Henry (Univ. of Edinburgh)

Th 5. (wk 5: 26 May)

Oriel

LANGUAGES FOR HISTORIANS Language Teaching Centre The University Language Teaching Centre, 12 Woodstock Road, offers to all students free of charge the following facilities: Taught classes in general language in French (3 levels), German (reading and speaking) (2 levels), Italian (3 levels), Spanish (2 levels), Russian (1 level) and Modern Greek (2 levels). There are materials for private study in 80 languages, and facilities for viewing live TV by satellite in French, German, Italian, and Russian. Undergraduates should visit the Centre in Noughth Week to obtain full information. Portuguese for Historians Dr Leal T. 11 Centre for

Portuguese Language, Littlegate House, St Ebbes

OTHER COURSES BRIDGE PAPERS FOR JOINT SCHOOLS CANDIDATES LECTURES AND CLASSES The list of Lectures and Classes is divided into sections for the Preliminary Examination (Sections 1 to 4), Final Honour School (Sections 5 to 10), Postgraduate Courses (Sections 10 to 23), and Courses for Research Students. The sections designed for undergraduate courses include general headings, History of the British Isles (Sections 1 and 5), General History (Sections 2 and 6), and specific headings, Optional Subjects (Section 3), Approaches, Historiography, Foreign Texts and Quantification (Section 4), Further Subjects (Section 7), Special Subjects (Section 8), Disciplines of History and Political Thought (Section 9), and The Compulsory Thesis (Section 10) Courses specifically designed for Optional, Further and Special Subjects are numbered (OS1, FS1, SS1, etc.), and these numbers may be added to other courses suitable for though not specific to these papers. Some courses of lectures are entered under more than one heading, while others not so entered may none the less be relevant to more than one subject in the Preliminary Examination or the Final Honour School. Undergraduates and graduates are recommended to read through all sections of the list and not to focus narrowly on those specifically designated for particular options in examinations. Lectures relevant to Modern History courses may also appear on other faculties’ lecture lists, which can be found on the University Web site at http://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/pub/lectures THE PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION (1) British History Lectures on the History of the British Isles are listed in Section 5; the same lectures are suitable for the Preliminary Examination and or the Final Honour School. (2) General History (3) Optional Subjects Theories of the State (OS 1) Dr J. Robertson and

Dr Stargardt T. Th. 11 (wks 1–3 and 5), M. T. 11 (wk 4)

Schools (wks 1–4) History Faculty (wk 5)

§The Age of Bede, c. 660–740 (OS 2) Dr Blair Th. 5 (wks 1–6) Schools (wks 1–3) Queen’s (wks 4–6)

‘Kingship in the age of Bede’ Prof. Charles-Edwards 28 Apr. Schools ‘A monastic golden age?’ Dr Blair 5 May Schools ‘The British and the Irish context’ Ms Edmonds 12 May Schools ‘Bede and Wilfrid’ Prof. Charles-Edwards 19 May Queen’s ‘The church: local organization and pastoral care’

Mr Pickles 26 May Queen’s

‘Art and architecture in the age of Bede’ Dr Blair 2 June Queen’s Early Gothic France (class) (OS 3) Dr Whittow T. 11.30 St Peter’s Conquest and Frontiers: England and the Celtic Peoples, 1150–1220 (OS 4)

Prof. Charles-Edwards M. W. 11 (wks 1–4)

Jesus

English Chivalry and the French War c. 1330–c. 1400 (OS 5)

Dr Vale M. 10, W. 9.30 (wks 1–4)

History Faculty

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Subject Lecturer Time Place Gunpowder, Compass and Printing Press: Technology and Society in Renaissance and Early Modern Europe (class) (OS 6)

Dr Dondi and Dr Johnston T. Th. 10 (wks 1–5)

Museum of the History of Science

§Witch-craft and Witch-hunting in Early Modern Europe (OS 7)

Prof. Roper and others T. W. 11 (wks 1–3) T. 11 (wk 4)

Schools

‘Statistics of the European witch-hunt’ Mr Briggs T. 26 Apr. Schools ‘Sources for the witch-hunt in France and her borderlands 1’

Mr Briggs W. 27 Apr. Schools

‘Sources for the witch-hunt in France and her borderlands 2’

Mr Briggs T. 3 May

‘Sources for the witch-hunt in the German-speaking lands 1’

Prof. Roper W. 4 May Schools

‘Sources for the witch-hunt in the German-speaking lands 2’

Prof. Roper T. 10 May Schools

‘Sources for the English witch-hunt’ Ms Bayman W. 11 May Schools ‘Scepticism’ Mr Southcombe T. 17 May Schools

The Boundaries of Witchcraft in Early Modern Lorraine

Mr Briggs and Dr Maryse Simon

M. W. 11 (wk 5) All Souls

Nobility and Gentry in England, 1560–1660 (OS 8)

Dr Ingram M.W. 12 (wks 1–4)

Brasenose

Conquest and Colonization: Spain and America in the Sixteenth Century (OS 9)

Dr Parrott and Dr Pollmann T. 10 (wks 1–6) Habbakuk Room, Jesus

Culture, Society and Politics, 1700–95 (OS 10) Ms Innes M. 11 (wks 1–4) Schools Culture, Society and Politics, 1700–95 (OS 10) Dr Gauci T. W. 11 (wks

1–2) Schools

Culture, Society and Politics, 1700–95 (OS 10) Dr Mitchell T. W. 11 (wks 3–4)

Schools

Revolution and Empire in France, 1789–1815 (OS 11)

Dr Broers M. W. 10 (wks 1–4)

Schools

§Theories of War and Peace in Europe, 1890–1914 (OS 12)

Prof. Pogge von Strandmann and others

Th. 12 (wks 1–3)W. 12 (wk 4)

Schools

‘Angell and Bloch’ Dr Gregory Th. 28 Apr. Schools ‘Social Darwinism’ Prof. Strachan Th. 5 May Schools ‘Socialism and Liebknecht’ Dr Stargardt Th. 12 May Schools ‘Bernhardi’ Prof. Pogge von

Strandmann W. 18 May Schools

Working-class Life and Industrial Work, 1870–1914 (class) (OS 13)

Mrs Howarth and Dr McKibbin

T. 5 St Hilda’s

Industrialization in Britain and France, 1750–1870 (for Preliminary Examination in Modern History and Economics)

Dr Grafe M. 3 (wks 1–6)

Chester Room, Nuffied

Industrialization in Britain and France, 1750–1870 (for Preliminary Examination in Modern History and Economics)

Dr Grafe T. 4 (wks 1–6) Seminar Room, Nuffield

(4) Approaches, Historiography, Foreign Texts and Quantification Meinecke, Kehr, and the German Sonderweg Mr Nehring Th. 12. (wks 1–

3) Schools

FINAL HONOUR SCHOOL (5) History of the British Isles An Introduction to the Anglo-Saxon Church Dr Blair T. 12 (wks 1–4) Schools §The Making of the March of Wales, c. 1067–1300

Mr Lieberman T. 11 (wks 1–6) Schools (wks 1–4) Jesus (wks 5–6)

‘Introduction: the political geography of Western Britain, c. 1300’

Mr Lieberman 26 Apr. Schools

‘The political frontier in Western Britain, 1066–1276’

Mr Lieberman 3 May Schools

‘Social and economic marches in Wales, 1067–1300’

Mr Lieberman 10 May Schools

‘The frontiers of peoples, 1067–1300’ Mr Lieberman 17 May Schools

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘Kingdoms, countries and marches: the context of the British Isles’

Mr Lieberman 24 May Jesus

‘Conclusion: the European perspective’ Mr Lieberman 31 May Jesus Politics and Kingship, 1216–1327: The Emergence of a National Community

Dr Maddicott T. F. 12 (wks 1–3) T. W. 12 (wk 4)

Schools

Religion, Society and Politics, 1330–1550 Dr B. Thompson T. Th. 11 (wks 1–4)

Schools (wks 1–3 and T. wk 4) History Faculty (Th. wk 4)

Heresy and Inquisition, 1380–1520 Dr Forrest W. 11 (wks 1–4) Schools §New Perspectives on British History, 1500–1700

Dr Gunn and others M. T. 2 (wks 1–4)

Schools

‘“Monarchical Republicanism”? New approaches to Elizabethan politics’

Alex Gajda (New College) M. 25 Apr. Schools

‘Persuasion, policy and Protestantism: Henrician propaganda at home and abroad’

Tracey Sowerby (Merton) T. 26 Apr. Schools

‘Sexual discourse as political discourse from the Reformation to the Restoration’

Alex Lumbers (Brasenose) M. 2 May Schools

‘Was there a “Calvinist consensus” in Early Modern England?’

Leif Dixon (Lady Margaret Hall)

T. 3 May Schools

‘The Marian persecution: failure or success?’ Megan Wheeler (Christ Church)

M. 9 May Schools

‘Local engagement with the early English Reformation’

Katherine Halliday (New College)

T. 10 May Schools

‘The Early Modern English and Welsh gentry in their European context’

Tomasz Gromelski (Balliol)

M. 16 May Schools

‘Continuity and change in the Tudor parliament, 1485–1603’

Paul Cavill (Corpus Christi)

T. 17 May Schools

Themes in Early Modern English Social History

Dr Pelling W. 12 (wks 1–4) Schools

Elizabeth I Dr Doran W. 11 (wks 1–4) Schools

Key Questions and Interpretations in Restoration History, 1660–88

Mr Southcombe and Dr Tapsell

T. Th. 12 (wks 1–4)

Schools (wks 1–3 and T. wk 4) Jesus (Th. wk 4)

Church, Politics and Society in England, 1660–1829

Dr Young Th. 11 (wks 1–3) Schools

The End of the Long Eighteenth Century? British History, 1780–1830

Ms Innes M. 12 (wks 1–4) Schools

Britain and Ireland, 1870–1922 Dr Paseta Th. 11 (wks 1–3) W. 11 (wk 4)

Schools

British Politics and Government in the Twentieth Century

Prof. Bogdanor W. F. 12 (wks 1–4)

Brasenose

(6) General History The periods of General History defined for the Final Honour School are: I. 285–476, II. 476–750, III. 700–900, IV. 900–1122, V. 1122–1273, VI. 1273–1409, VII. 1409–1525, VIII. 1517–1618, IX. 1618–1715, X. 1715–1799, XI. 1799–1856, XII. 1856–1914, XIII. 1914–1945, XIV. 1941–1973, XV. Britain’s North American Colonies: From Settlement to Independence, 1600–1914, XVI From Colonies to Nation: The History of the United States, 1776–1877; XVII The History of the United States since 1863; XVIII. Europe and the Wider World 1815–1914. So far as is possible these periods are indicated after the titles of courses. The Last Great War of Antiquity (I) Mr Howard-Johnston F. 12 History Faculty

Aspects of Western Monasticism, c. 430–1215 (II–V)

Dr Bombi W. 3 (wks 1–4) Schools

Byzantine Art and Architecture, AD 630–1453 (II–VII)

Dr Mango T. 12 Seminar Room, Institute of Archaeology

Medieval Mediterranean Empires, c.1050–1300 (IV–V)

Dr C.J. Holmes T. W 11 (wks 1–4)

Schools

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Subject Lecturer Time Place Papacy and Empire, 1122–1203 (V–VI) Dr Bombi M. 3 (wks 1–4) Schools Later Medieval France and Burgundy: Politics and Culture (VI–VII)

Dr Vale T. 11 St John’s

Religion and Politics in Sixteenth-century Europe (VIII)

Dr Pollmann W. 11 (wks 1–4) Schools

Reformation Theories of Revolution (VIII) Dr G. Garnett M. 10 (wks 1–4) Schools §Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe (VIII–IX) Prof. Roper M. Th. 11 (wks

1–3) M. W. 11 (wk 4)

Schools

‘The witch-hunt in Europe: patterns and problems’

Prof. Roper M. 25 Apr. Schools

‘Gender and the witch-hunt’ Prof. Roper Th. 28 Apr. Schools ‘Possession’ Prof. Roper M. 2 May Schools ‘Religion and magic’ Prof. Roper Th. 5 May Schools ‘The eye of the storm: Germany’ Prof. Roper M. 9 May Schools ‘The fantasy of witchcraft’ Prof. Roper Th. 12 May Schools ‘Contrasts: England and Scotland’ Prof. Roper M. 16 May Schools ‘Images of the witch in art and literature’ Prof. Roper W. 18 May Schools

The Boundaries of Witchcraft in Early Modern Lorraine (VIII–IX)

Mr Briggs and Dr Maryse Simon

M. W. 11 (wk 5) All Souls

Europe, 1715–1799 (X) Prof. Brockliss M. W. 12 (wks 1–4)

Schools

Italy in the Age of Revolution, 1750–1870 (X–XII)

Dr Broers W. 11 History Faculty

Europe, 1799–1856 (XI) Dr Hippler W. 12 (wks 1–4) Schools Metternich: Austria and Europe, 1815–48 (XI) Prof. Evans F. 12 MacGregor

Room, Oriel Modern Chinese History, 1800–1989 (XI–XIV and XVIII)

Dr Askew W. F. 11 Institute for Chinese Studies

The Soviet Union, 1917–41 (XIII) Dr Priestland M. T. 2 Schools From the Clash of the Titans, 1914–1918, to Annihilating Civilians, 1939–45. First and Second World Wars Compared (XIII–XIV)

Prof. Pogge von Strandmann

W. 5 (wks 1–4) Schools

§Europe 1914–45: Political and Ideological Dynamics

Dr Conway and Dr Gerwarth

T. Th. 12 (wks 1–4)

Schools (wks 1–3 and T. wk 4) Balliol (Th. wk 4)

‘Introduction’ Dr Conway T. 26 Apr. Schools ‘Revolution and counter-revolution’ Dr Gerwarth Th. 28 Apr. Schools ‘Communism and Socialism’ Dr Gerwarth T. 3 May Schools ‘Fascism’ Dr Conway Th. 5 May Schools ‘Catholicism’ Dr Conway T. 10 May Schools ‘Democracy’ Dr Gerwarth Th. 12 May Schools ‘Modernity/Anti-modernism’ Dr Gerwarth T. 17 May Schools ‘Europe’s Return to Peace and Democracy (a.k.a. World War II)’

Dr Conway Th. 19 May Balliol

The World 1914–45: Social and Cultural Dynamics (XIII)

Dr Gregory W. F. 12 (wks 1–4)

Schools

Nazi Germany (XIII–XIV) Dr Stargardt T. Th. 10 (wks 1–3), M. T. 10 (wk 4)

Schools

§General History, 1941–73 (XIV) Dr Priestland M. T. 12 (wks 1, 3–4); T. 12 (wk 2)

Schools

‘Introduction’ Dr Priestland M. 25 Apr. Schools ‘The Soviet Bloc’ Dr Prielstand T. 26 Apr. Schools ‘Western Europe’ Dr Conway T. 3 May Schools ‘Decolonisation’ Dr Misra M. 9 May Schools ‘Post-colonial states’ Dr Misra T. 10 May Schools ‘The American Civil Rights Movement’ Dr Tuck M. 16 May Schools ‘Culture and the Cold War’ Dr Buchanan T. 17 May Schools

§History of the United States since 1776 (XVI–XVII)

Prof. Carwardine, Dr Scanlon, Dr Sexton, and Dr Tuck

M. W. 11 (wks 1–4)

Schools

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘Vietnam’ Dr Sexton M. 25 Apr. Schools ‘Great Society’ Dr Scanlon W. 27 Apr. Schools ‘Historians and American foreign relations’ Dr Sexton M. 2 May Schools ‘Rise of modern Conservatism’ Dr Scanlon W. 4 May Schools ‘Black power and multiculturalism’ Dr Tuck M. 9 May Schools ‘Religion’ Prof. Carwardine W. 11 May Schools ‘Women’s history’ Dr Tuck M. 16 May Schools ‘American historical writing’ Dr Tuck W. 18 May Schools

Americanization and Anti-Americanism in the Twentieth-century (Reading and Discussion Group) (XVII)

Dr Sedlmaier Th. 5 (wks 1–6) History Faculty

The Emergence of Modern Africa Dr Deutsch Th. 11.30 St Cross (7) Further Subjects The arrangements for Further Subjects vary from one to another, but in some cases there will be both lectures and classes; and in some cases the number of candidates requires that classes be divided into two or three groups with different lecturers. The Near East in the Age of Justinian and Muhammad (Revision class) (FS 2)

Mr Howard-Johnston T. 9 (wks 1–2) History Faculty

Medieval Mediterranean Empires, c.1050–1300 (IV–V)

Dr C.J. Holmes T. W 11 (wks 1–4)

Schools

Britain and Ireland, 1870–1922 (FS 20) Dr Paseta Th. 11 (wks 1–4) Schools §Scholasticism and Humanism (class) (FS 24) Dr G. Garnett and others T. 11 (wks 1–4) History Faculty

‘Aristotelianism’ Dr G. Garnett 26 Apr. History Faculty ‘Canon law’ Dr Bombi 3 May History Faculty ‘Conciliarism’ Dr G. Garnett 10 May History Faculty ‘Humanism’ Dr Rundle 17 May History Faculty

(8) Special Subjects Byzantium in the Age of Constantine Porphyrogenitus 913–919 (SS 3) (Revision Class)

Mr Howard-Johnston T. 10 (wks 1–2) History Faculty

(9) Disciplines of History and Political Thought §Varieties of History: the Modern History of History

Dr G. Garnett, Mr Ghosh, Dr Robertson, and Dr Young

W. 12 Schools (wks 1–4), St Anne’s (wks 5–6)

‘Writing the history of this world: the Enlightenment’s expulsion of God from history’

Dr Robertson 27 Apr. Schools

‘Historismus: the German conception of History’

Mr Ghosh 4 May Schools

‘The history of ideas: from Collingwood to Quentin Skinner’

Dr G. Garnett 11 May Schools

‘The Whig idea of history: progress and its critics’

Dr Young 18 May Schools

‘“Total history”: economy, society and Marxism’

Mr Ghosh 25 May St Anne’s

‘A critical history of cultural history’ Dr Young 1 June St Anne’s Reformation Theories of Revolution Dr G. Garnett M. 10 (wks 1–4) Schools (10) The Compulsory Thesis Writing a History Thesis Dr Gunn and others W. 10 (wks 1–4) Schools Sources for Theses in Oxford OULS staff and others F. 2–5.30 pm

(wk 3: 13 May) Schools

POSTGRADUATE COURSES The seminars and classes listed in sections 11 to 23 are designed for M.St., M.Sc., and M.Phil. students in Modern History and associated areas of study. Persons not reading for these degrees, including undergraduates in Modern History and its associated Joint Schools, may attend the seminars and classes listed in sections 11 to 23 but are asked to seek prior permission from the seminar Convenor. Probationer research students in Modern History are reminded that they are required to attend the ‘core’ seminar relevant to their period or area of study. M.Phil. students are advised that offerings listed in section 12 may be relevant to their course of study.

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Subject Lecturer Time Place (11) M.St. in Historical Research and Probationer Research Students Core Seminars Medieval History Seminar Dr Vale W. 11 St John’s British History 1680–1840 Dr Gauci, Ms Innes, and

Dr Stevenson W. 5 Lincoln

PRS In-house European History Seminar Dr Caplan To be arranged To be arranged Research Seminar in American History Dr Sexton W. 4 (wks 1, 3–

5, 7), W. 5 (wks 2, 6)

RAI

1Commonwealth History Workshop: Globalization and Imperial History

Prof. J. Brown, Dr Darwin, and Dr Deutsch

F. 9.30 am–4.45 pm (wk 3: 13 May)

History Faculty

South Asian History Seminar Dr Washbrook T. 2 St Antony’s Staff-Graduate Seminar in Economic and Social History

Prof. Allen, Dr Harley, Prof. Humphries, and Prof. Offer

W. 5 (wks 1–5) Seminar Room, All Souls

Other Seminars English Medieval Libraries and the Survival of Manuscripts

Mr Willoughby M. 11 (wks 5–8) History Faculty

Documentary Sources and their Interpretation, 1250–1500

Dr Vale and Dr Bombi Th. 11 St John’s

Graduate Presentations in Early Modern European History

Dr Pollmann F. 4 (wks 1–2) History Faculty

Americanization and Anti-Americanism in the Twentieth Century (Reading and Discussion Group

Dr Sedlmaier Th. 5 (wks 1–6) History Faculty

(12) M.St. in Modern History Core Seminars Medieval History Seminar Dr Vale W. 11 St John’s British History, 1680–1840 Dr Gauci, Ms Innes, and

Dr Stevenson W. 5 Lincoln

PRS In-House European History Seminar Dr Caplan To be arranged To be arranged Research Seminar in American History Dr Sexton W. 4 (wks 1, 3–

5, 7) W. 5 (wks 2, 6)

RAI

1Commonwealth History Workshop: Globalization and Imperial History

Prof. J. Brown, Dr Darwin, and Dr Deutsch

F. 9.30 am–4.45 pm (wk 3: 13 May)

History Faculty

South Asian History Seminar Dr Washbrook T. 2 St Antony’s Staff-Graduate Seminar in Economic and Social History

Prof. Allen, Dr Harley, Prof. Humphries, and Prof. Offer

W. 5 (wks 1–5) Seminar Room, All Souls

Other Seminars Documentary Sources and their Interpretation, 1250–1500

Dr Vale and Dr Bombi Th. 11 St John’s

Graduate Workshop in American History Prof. Carwardine T. 4 RAI Americanization and Anti-Americanism in the Twentieth Century (Reading and Discussion group)

Dr Sedlmaier Th. 5 (wks 1–6) History Faculty

(13) History of Art and Visual Culture Core Seminars Interrogating the Classical Tradition from the Renaissance to Post-Modernism

Prof. Kemp T. W. 3 (wks 1–4)

History of Art, St Ebbe’s

Interrogating the Classical Tradition from the Renaissance to post-modernism (class for BA students only)

Dr G. Parkinson To be arranged History of Art, St Ebbe’s

Departmental Research Seminar Prof. Kemp and Ana Finel Honigman

T. 4.15 History of Art, St Ebbe’s

Other Seminars and Lectures 1Ashmolean Art History Lecture Series Dr Kornmeier, Dr Jachec,

and Dr Whistler W. 5 (wks 1, 3, 5, 7)

Ashmolean Museum

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Subject Lecturer Time Place Interdisciplinary Research Seminar in the Philosophy and Theory of the Visual Arts

Dr Hyman and Dr Reed-Tsocha

F. 5 Trinity

(14) M.St., M.Phil. in Byzantine Studies The Last Great War of Antiquity Mr Howard-Johnston F. 12 History Faculty 1Byzantine Studies Seminar Mr Howard-Johnston,

Prof. Jeffreys, and Dr Mango

F. 5 New Seminar Room, St John’s

Seminar on the Peira Mr Howard-Johnston and Mr Danny

M. 11.30 Fraenkel Room, Corpus Christi

1After Rome Seminar Mr Howard-Johnston and Mr Ward-Perkins

Th. 5 Trinity

1Byzantine Art and Archaeology Seminar: Architecture

Dr Mango F. 12 Seminar Room, Institute of Archaeology

Byzantine Art and Architecture, AD 630–1453 Dr Mango T. 12 Seminar Room, Institute of Archaeology

Greek Palaeography (class) Prof. Jeffreys Th. 2.15 (wks 1–4)

47 Wellington Square

Byzantine Hagiography Prof. Jeffreys F. 12 47 Wellington Square

Byzantine Text Seminar Prof. Jeffreys F. 9.30 47 Wellington Square

(15) M.Sc., M.Phil. in Economic and Social History Staff-Graduate Seminar in Economic and Social History

Prof. Allen, Dr Harley, Prof. Humphries, and Prof. Offer

W. 5 (wks 1–5) Seminar Room, All Souls

(16) M.Sc., M.Phil., in the History of Science, Medicine and Technology (17) Advanced papers available as part of the M.Sc. and M.Phil. in Economic and Social History and in the M.Sc. and M.Phil in History of Science, Medicine and Technology Advanced papers will be taught at times to be arranged by individual tutors. Teaching will normally take the form of tutorials or small classes. Other postgraduates who wish to attend these may do so by agreement with the tutors concerned. Undergraduates will not normally be admitted to tutorials or small classes associated with Advanced Papers. Contemporary Russian Polity, Society and Economy in Historical Perspective

Dr Leonard To be arranged To be arranged

Economy and Society in Colonial Africa, c.1880–1960

Dr Deutsch To be arranged To be arranged

Macro-economic Behaviour of the British Economy since 1870

Mr Dimsdale To be arranged To be arranged

The Industrialization of Germany, 1850–1914 Prof. Pogge von Strandmann

To be arranged To be arranged

Industrailization in Europe, North America and East Asia since 1700

Dr Grant To be arranged To be arranged

Social and Cultural Change in France 1600–1720

Mr Briggs To be arranged To be arranged

Violence and Historical Memory in Eastern Africa

Dr Anderson To be arranged To be arranged

Problems in European Historical Demography, 1560–1914

Dr Landers To be arranged To be arranged

Comparative Reception of Evolutionary Biology and Eugenics in Britain, France and Germany, 1850–1918

Prof. Weindling To be arranged To be arranged

Knowledge, Science and Empire Dr Chakrabarti To be arranged To be arranged The Birth of the Clinic, 1750–1850 Prof. Brockliss To be arranged To be arranged Disease, Medicine and Colonial Expansion Dr Harrison To be arranged To be arranged Electrotherapy: A Case Study in Nineteenth and Twentieth-century Science, Technology and Medicine

Dr Senior To be arranged To be arranged

International Health and Welfare Organizations in the Twentieth Century

Prof. Weindling To be arranged To be arranged

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Subject Lecturer Time Place Medicine and Modern Warfare Dr Harrison To be arranged To be arranged (18) M.Sc. in History of Science: Instruments, Museums, Science, Technology Science, Technology and Instrumentation, since 1850

Dr Bennett and Dr S. Johnston

M. F. 10 Museum of the History of Science

(19) M.St. in Women's Studies (20) M.Sc. in English Local History (21) M.Phil in Modern European History (22) M.Phil in Latin American Studies (23) M.Phil in Russian and Eastern European Studies Russian Cultural History Seminar Dr Priestland M. 5 St Antony’s RESEARCH SEMINARS Core Seminars Medieval History Seminar Dr Vale W. 11 St John’s British History, 1680–1840 Dr Gauci, Ms Innes, and

Dr Stevenson W. 5 Lincoln

PRS In-house European History Seminar Dr Caplan To be arranged To be arranged Research Seminar in American History Dr Sexton W. 5 (wks 1, 3–

5, 7) RAI

§Commonwealth History Workshop: Globalization and Imperial History

Prof. J. Brown, Dr Darwin, and Dr Deutsch

F. 9.30 am–4.45 pm (wk 3: 13 May)

History Faculty

‘Was the British Empire a global system?’ Prof. Tom Tomlinson (SOAS, London)

9.30 am–10.10 am

History Faculty

‘Imperialism, globalization, and economic development: the experience of British West Africa, 1807–1960’

Dr Gareth Austin (LSE) 10.10 am–10.50 am

History Faculty

‘Reflections on the global and the postcolonial’

Prof. Catherine Hall (University College, London)

11.20 am–12.00 noon

History Faculty

‘A selective globalization of values: the case of India under the Raj’

Prof. Tapan Raychaudhuri 2.00 pm– 2.40 pm

History Faculty

‘Global Goans: circulating home in an imperial and post-imperial world’

Dr Margaret Frenz (St Cross)

2.40 pm–3.20 pm

History Faculty

South Asian History Seminar Dr Washbrook T. 2 St Antony’s Staff-Graduate Seminar in Economic and Social History

Prof. Allen, Dr Harley, Prof. Humphries, and Prof. Offer

W. 5 (wks 1–5) Seminar Room, All Souls

Other Seminars §Byzantine Studies Seminar Mr Howard-Johnston,

Prof. Jeffreys, and Dr Mango

F. 5 New Seminar Room, St John’s

‘Psellos and the year, not the schism, of 1054’ Prof. M. Jeffreys (Oxford and London)

29 Apr. St John’s

‘The great palace: archaeology, text and topography’

Dr J. Bardill (Newcastle) 6 May St John’s

‘Anderin and the “town” in Syria’ Dr M. Mango (St John’s) 13 May St John’s ‘A courtier in the women’s quarters: the rise and fall of Psellos’

Frederick Lauritzen (Columbia, New York)

20 May St John’s

‘Manuscripts and meaning: suggestions for a “material support” reading of Byzantine texts’

Niels Gaul (Dumbarton Oaks and Bonn)

27 May St John’s

‘Justinian’s Balkans’ Alexander Sarantis (St Anne’s)

3 June St John’s

‘Demetrius Kydones’ career and writings: religion and politics in mid-fourteenth-century Byzantium’

Judith Gilliland (St John’s) 10 June St John’s

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘Literacy and political culture in Byzantium, 950–1250’

Catherine Holmes (University)

17 June St John’s

§Byzantine Church History Dr Baun M. 2.15 Wharton Room, All Souls

‘Why did people found hospitals in Byzantium?’

Peregrine Horden (Royal Holloway, London)

25 Apr. All Souls

‘Faith and charity: the ecclesiastical elites of the Palaiologan period and their attitudes towards the poor’

Dr Dennis Stathakopoulos (King’s College, London)

2 May All Souls

‘Monastic Florilegia of the eleventh and twelfth centuries’

Ms Evangeli Skaka (Oxford)

9 May All Souls

‘Typika and other texts’ Prof. Margaret Mullett (Belfast)

16 May All Souls

‘The Council of Florence (1438–9) revisited: failure or success?’

The Right Revd. Kallistos Ware (Oxford)

23 May All Souls

‘The church and the law courts in the Palaiologan period’

Dr Ruth Macrides (Birmingham)

30 May All Souls

‘Photios as a theologian’ The Revd. Prof. Andrew Louth (Durham)

6 June All Souls

‘Enforcing orthodoxy in Byzantium’ Prof. Averil Cameron (Oxford)

13 June All Souls

§Byzantine Art and Archaeology Seminar: Architecture

Dr Mango F. 12 Seminar Room, Institute of Archaeology

‘The bath in late antiquity’ Dr Mango 29 Apr. Institute of Archaeology

‘The church of St Polyeuktos: archaeology and interpretation’

Dr Mango 6 May Institute of Archaeology

‘The late antique (fifth–seventh century) lecture rooms in Alexandria’

Dr Judith McKenzie 13 May Institute of Archaeology

‘Aspects of eleventh-century Byzantine architecture’

Dr Tassos Papacostas 20 May Institute of Archaeology

‘Liturgy verses architecture in the Constantinopolitan church’

Hana’a Bou Nasr 27 May Institute of Archaeology

‘The layout and buildings of the cities of northern Mesopotamia’

Elif Keser Kayaalp 3 June Institute of Archaeology

‘Ecclesiastical representations in Byzantine art’

Elizabeth Montgomerie 10 June Institute of Archaeology

§After Rome Seminar Mr Howard-Johnston and Mr Ward-Perkins

Th. 5 Trinity

‘Law in the Burgundian kingdom’ Peter Heather (Worcester) 28 Apr. Danson Room, Trinity

‘Rome, Vivarium, Bobbio: centres of learning in late antique Italy’

Richard Sharpe (Wadham) 5 May Trinity

‘Ritual and the establishment of the Abbasid state: oaths of allegiance to al-Mansur and al-Mahdi’

Andrew Marsham (Pembroke)

12 May Trinity

‘Shenoute vs. Gesios: a monastic leader undertakes to ruin a pagan notable in early fifth-century Egypt’

Stephen Emmel (Univ. of Münster)

19 May Trinity

‘Byzantine survivals in Umayyad Syria’ Clive Foss (Georgetown Univ., Washington)

26 May Trinity

‘Measures and weights from Scythopolis’ Elias Khamis (Hebrew Univ., Jerusalem)

2 June Trinity

‘Global politics in late antiquity’ James Howard-Johnston (Corpus Christi)

9 June Trinity

‘The late antique city: change or decline?’ Luke Lavan (Univ. of Leuven)

16 June Trinity

§Medieval History Research Seminar Dr Brand and Dr Whittow M. 5 Wharton Room, All Souls

‘A thirteenth-century endowment deed from Central Anatolia in the context of the social, economic, and intellectual networks in the region’

Dr Judith Pfeiffer (Oriental Institute)

25 Apr. All Souls

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘Powers and ceremonies: the meetings of kings of France and England, 1066-1204’

Prof. John Gillingham 2 May All Souls

‘How much state does a medieval nation need? Some reflections on the German evidence, c. 1250-c. 1450’

Dr Len Scales (Durham) 9 May All Souls

‘Hiberno-Saxon Contact in the west of the Northumbrian Kingdom, c. 650–950’

Fiona Edmonds (New College)

16 May All Souls

‘The Empire of Mu’awiya’ Prof. Clive Foss (Georgetown)

23 May All Souls

‘The authority of Matilda of Boulogne: sources and uses’

Patricia Dark (St Hilda’s) 30 May All Souls

‘Princely power in the Principality of Capua-Benevento in the tenth century’

Luke Ramsden (University) 6 June All Souls

‘Genetic evidence for a substantial Anglo-Saxon contribution to the modern gene pool’

Dr Mark Thomas (University College, London)

13 June All Souls

§Medieval Social and Economic History Seminar

Dr Blair and Dr Forrest W. 5 All Souls

‘Who brought tithes in the later middle ages?’ Benjamin Dodds 27 Apr. All Souls ‘Bridges and economic development in pre-industrial England’

David Harrison 4 May All Souls

‘Canal-building and water-transport in early medieval England’

John Blair 11 May All Souls

‘Economic implications of new discoveries of medieval artefacts’

David Hinton 18 May All Souls

‘Present and future practice: are we making the best use of the sources?’

Round Table 25 May All Souls

‘Writing social history from later Anglo-Saxon burial practices’

Dawn Hadley 1 June All Souls

‘Economic development in the mid-Thames Valley in the tenth to twelfth centuries’

Robert Peberdy 8 June All Souls

‘Sub-tenancies and inter-manorial landholdings in south Buckinghamshire: Do manorial records provide a full picture of medieval peasant landholdings’

Matt Tompkins 15 June All Souls

Documentary Sources and their Interpretation, 1250–1500

Dr Vale and Dr Bombi Th. 11 St John’s

Medieval Church and Culture Dr Smith T. 5 Garrard Room, Harris Manchester

§Religion in the British Isles, 1400–1700 Dr Haigh, Dr Heal, Prof. MacCulloch, and Dr Maltby

Th. 5 Seminar Room, Corpus Christi

‘Witchcraft, sodomy and the Bishop of Waterford’

Peter Marshall (Univ. of Warwick)

28 Apr. Corpus Christi

‘The ecclesiastical politics of post-Restoration Scotland’

Clare Jackson (Trinity Hall, Cambridge)

5 May Corpus Christi

‘Secret presses, radical Puritanism, and the crisis of 1640’

David Como (Stanford Univ.)

12 May Corpus Christi

‘Presbyterianism and print culture, c. 1643–c.1680’

Ann Hughes (Univ. of Keele)

19 May Corpus Christi

‘What, more lollardy? Possible new directions in lollard studies’

Ian Forrest (All Souls) 26 May Corpus Christi

‘Deprivation and restoration: the fortunes of married clergy in the Diocese of London, 1554–1564’

Brett Usher (Univ. of Reading)

2 June Corpus Christi

‘Death and dying in the writings of Thomas More’

Craig D’Alton (Univ. of Melbourne)

9 June Corpus Christi

‘Dr Temple’s pew: sex and clerical status in the 1630s’

Christopher Haigh (Christ Church)

16 June Corpus Christi

§Medicine, Surgery and Culture Dr Pelling M. 2.15 (wks 1, 3–5, 7–8)

Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, 47 Banbury Road

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘The importance of towns to the seriously ill and dying in seventeenth-century Kent’

Dr Ian Mortimer (Univ. of Exeter)

25 Apr. Wellcome Unit

‘From foetic air to filth: the cultural transformation of British epidemiological thought, c. 1780–c.1848’

Dr Michael Brown (Univ of York)

9 May Wellcome Unit

‘Surgery and empire: Lister’s students in imperial service’

Prof. Anne Crowther (Univ. of Glasgow)

16 May Wellcome Unit

‘“More Copious, and less Unaccurate”: Robert Boyle’s planned second edition of his Memoirs for the History of Human Blood’

Dr Harriet Knight (Queen Mary, Univ. of London)

23 May Wellcome Unit

‘Pills, balms and elixirs: making and selling new medicines in later seventeenth-century London’

Dr David Haycock (LSE) 6 June Wellcome Unit

‘Eye surgery in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Europe’

Dr Laurence Eldridge (Univ of Ottawa)

13 June Wellcome Unit

§Gender, Culture and Society in Britain and Europe, 1450–1900

Prof. Dame Olwen Hufton and Prof. Roper

T. 5 History Faculty

‘Witchcraft and the western imagination’ Lyndal Roper 26 Apr. History Faculty ‘The disenchantment of the world? The ambiguous legacy of the Reformation’

Alex Walsham 3 May History Faculty

‘Dust and curses: witchcraft in the early modern Isle of Man’

James Sharpe 10 May History Faculty

‘Reason, revelation and women in the writings of Mary Astell’

Sarah Trethewey 17 May History Faculty

‘Self-fashioning and changes of identity in early modern Italy’

Kim Siebenuener 24 May History Faculty

‘An ideal marriage after Trent’ Simone Laqua 31 May History Faculty §Restoration to Reform Seminar Dr Ballaster, Dr Gleadle,

and Dr Williams M. 5.15 (wks 2, 4, 6, 8)

Council Room, Mansfield

‘“Trusting in the Book Way”: How Franklin & Hall imagined their transatlantic book trade’

Nicholas Wrightson (Jesus) 2 May Mansfield

‘Plagiarism and John Dunton’ Liam Condon (Exeter) 2 May Mansfield ‘The media response to Stephen Duck, 1730–31’

Jennifer Batt (St. Hugh’s ) 16 May Mansfield

‘Charles Dodd and the rhetoric of Catholic historiography’

Kendra Packham (Wadham)

30 May Mansfield

‘Warburton and the idea of the philosophic historian’

Mary Brereton, (Wadham) 13 June Mansfileld

§Themes in the Modern History of Religion Dr E.J. Garnett and Dr S.C. Williams and Dr M. Grimley

M. 5 History Faculty

‘“The family that prays together, stays together’: English Catholic spirituality, social identity and secularisation’

Alana Harris (Wadham) 25 Apr. History Faculty

‘The religion of Englishness: Puritanism, providence and national character 1918–60’

Matthew Grimley (Royal Holloway)

2 May History Faculty

‘Popular music and English theology, 1940–90’

Ian Jones (Manchester University) and Peter Webster (IHR)

9 May History Faculty

‘“Ostentation is always out of place, but especially so in the vicarage”: Anglican and Wesleyan Methodist clerical homes,1850–1910’

Jane Hamlett (ARHUL) 16 May History Faculty

‘Spirituality, mankind and modern communities in the metaphysics of Semyon Frank 1909–53’

Stephanie Solywoda (Pembroke)

23 May History Faculty

‘“Mere religious hallucination”: Julia Wood and the New Forest Shakers’

Janet Rose (Harris Manchester)

30 May History Faculty

‘Sceptical afterlives: Hume and Gibbon in the nineteenth century’

Brian Young (Christ Church)

6 June History Faculty

§East and East-Central Europe Seminar Prof. Evans F. 2.15 MacGregor Room, Oriel

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘Pleasing Britain, serving Hitler: the Hungarian political elite and the revision of the Treaty of Trianon, 1933–41’

Tibor Frank (ELTE, Budapest)

29 Apr. Oriel

‘An empress thwarted – Maria Theresa and the Jews of Prague, 1745’

Lionel Kochan (Oxford) 6 May Oriel

‘“The sword hanging over their heads”: the significance of pogrom for Jewish life and self-understanding in fin-de-siècle Eastern Europe’

Natan Meir (Southampton) 13 May Oriel

‘The polish underground and the Jews during World War Two: the historiographical controversy’

Joshua Zimmerman (Yeshiva Univ., New York)

20 May Oriel

‘Geza von Hoffman: founder of Hungarian racial hygiene?’

Marius Turda (Oxford Brookes Univ.)

27 May Oriel

‘The Duke of York as King of Hungary? Britain and the Hungarian conspiracy of 1788–90’

Orsolya Szkály (London) 3 June Oriel

‘From despised to protected: Yiddish in the language strategy of orthodox Jewry in Hugarny (eighteenth–twentieth century)’

Szonja Komoróczy 10 June Oriel

‘Keeping the peace of the manor: manor court and villages in early seventeenth-century Hungary’

Tadakiio (Hokkaido Univ.) 17 June Oriel

Polite Society in Eighteenth-century Britain (Students interested in taking part in this seminar must contact he convenor first, if possible before the start of term)

Ms Innes T. 2 Somerville

§Modern British History and Politics Seminar: Dr Davis, Dr Goldman, and Mrs Howarth

Th. 5 (wks 1–5) History Faculty

‘The politics of the English constitution 1848–67’

Robert Saunders (Magdalen)

28 Apr. History Faculty

‘Wizards of the North: Gladstone, Scott and Scottish Identity’

Ruth Clayton (St Hilda’s) 5 May History Faculty

‘Revisionism revisited: egalitarian strategy and the “Keynesian Welfare State” 1945–64’

Ben Jackson (Mansfield) 12 May History Faculty

‘“Clever little devils are more dangerous than the stupid ones.” The cultivation of character, the curriculum and the question of “Religion” in the 1944 Education Act’

Greg Dochuk (St John’s) 19 May History Faculty

‘Against “Engineers of the Human Soul”: Isaiah Berlin’s anti-managerial Liberalism’

Joshua Cherniss (Balliol) 26 May History Faculty

Gender and History Reading Group Dr Gleadle T. 1 (wks 2, 5, 8) Seminar Room, RAI

§Research Seminar in Irish History Prof. Foster T. 5 (wks 2, 4) Old Library, Hertford

‘Peace promoters or Iscariots of Ulster? The churches, ecumenism and the Northern Troubles, 1962–73’

Daithi O Corráin (Trinity College, Dublin)

3 May Hertford

‘The politics of a Young Irish Nationalist: Cesca Chenevix Trench 1914–16’

Prof. Anthony Fletcher 17 May Hertford

Communism and Nazism: Perspectives from the twenty-first century

Prof. R. Gellately F. 10 (wk 4: 20 May)

Seminar Room, RAI

§Russian Social and Cultural History Seminar Dr Priestland M. 5 St Antony’s ‘People and power in post-war Russia: popular attitudes towards Soviet authority, 1945–1953’

Shaun Morcom (Birkbeck College, London)

25 Apr. St Antony’s

‘Representations of the poor: The world of St Petersburg beggars’

Hubertus Jahn (Clare College, Cambridge)

2 May St Antony’s

‘The origins of the cult of Minin and Pozharskii and Russian political mythology’

Andrei Zorin (New College, Oxford)

9 May St Antony’s

‘Russian views of Empire in Turkestan and the example of British India, c. 1860–1910

Alexander Morrison (All Souls)

16 May St Antony’s

Why did Ivan fight? Combat motivation and the Red Army in world war

Catherine Merridale (Queen Mary, London)

23 May St Antony’s

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘From geneaology to generation: The birth of Cohort Thinking in Russia’

Stephen Lovell (King’s College, London)

30 May St Antony’s

‘Heavenly letters and tales of the forest: “superstition” against Bolshevism’

Steve Smith (University of Essex)

6 June St Antony’s

‘Stalinism and the culture of violence Jörg Baberowski (Humboldt University, Berlin)

13 June St Antony’s

Americanization and Anti-Americanism in the Twentieth Century (reading and discussion group)

Dr Sedlmaier Th. 5 (wks 1–6) History Faculty

History, Culture and Politics of the Islamic World

Dr Nizami and Prof. Piscator

W. 5 Centre for Islamic Studies

African Studies Seminar Dr Anderson, Prof. Beinart and Dr Mustapha

Th. 5 St Antony’s

Africa Research Seminar Dr Deutsch W. 2 St Cross §African History and Politics Seminar Daniel Branch and Jan-

George Deutsch M. 5 Library Wing

Seminar Room, Queen Elizabeth House

‘Awakening the sleeping giant: African universities and the African Renaissance’

David Johnson (Univ. of Oxford)

25 Apr. QEH

‘Intelligence, political authority, and dissent in the one-party states of East Africa, 1960–80’

Jim Brennan (SOAS) 2 May QEH

‘Language work and colonial politics in eastern Africa: the making of standard Swahili and School Kikuyu’

Derek Peterson (Univ. of Cambridge)

9 May QEH

‘Punishing the “Native” in Inter-war Rhodesia’

Jocelyn Alexander (Univ. of Oxford)

16 May QEH

‘Going for cai at Gatundu, 1968–9: reversion to a Gikuyu ethnic past or building a national future for Kenya?’

Ben Knighton (Univ. of Oxford)

23 May QEH

‘Local politics in eastern Uganda, 1945–62’ Stuart McConnel (SOAS) 30 May QEH ‘Weber, entrepreneurial values and vigilantes: identity and economic action in Africa’

Kate Meagher (Univ of Oxford)

6 June

‘The fragmentation of ethnic communities in contemporary Kenya: the case of the Kalenjin’

Gabrielle Lynch (Univ. of Oxford)

13 June QEH

Postcolonial Graduate Seminar Dr Sunder Rajan and Prof. Young

Th. 5 (wks 2, 4, 6, 8)

Wadham

Graduate Workshop in Commonwealth History Mr Sebe T. 5 History Faculty Nissan Seminar in Japanese Studies Dr Waswo M. 5 St Antony’s Graduate Seminar in Japanese Studies Prof. Goodman and Dr

Waswo Th. 2.30 Seminar Room,

Nissan Institute §Ashmolean Art History Lecture Series Dr Kornmeier, Dr Jachec,

and Dr Whistler W. 5 (wks 1, 3, 5, 7)

Ashmolean Museum

‘Italian Renaissance plaquettes: the origins and functions of the small relief in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries’

Dr Marika Lenio 27 Apr. Ashmolean

‘Jospeh Wright’s images of the Orrery and air pump: a documentary reassessment of the meaning of two of British art history’s canonical images’

Dr Matthew Craske (Oxford Brookes)

11 May Ashmolean

‘Scientific photographs from W.H.F. Talbot to Bernice Abbott’

Dr Kelley Wilder (History of Art Department)

25 May Ashmolean

‘The uses of landscape painting in Rome c.1600’

Thierry Morel (History of Art Department)

8 June Ashmolean

§St John’s 450: Moments in the History of St John’s

Dr Emerson and Dr Whyte W. 5 St John’s

‘Sir Thomas White’ Malcolm Vale (St John’s) 27 Apr. St John’s ‘From Campion to Laud’ Michael Riordan (St

John’s) 4 May St John’s

‘Richard Rawlinson’ Roey Sweet (Leicester) 11 May St John’s

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Subject Lecturer Time Place ‘North Oxford’ Tanis Hinchliffe

(Westiminster) 18 May St John’s

FOOTNOTE REFERENCES

1For details of individual seminars, see below under Research Seminars.