Faculty of English - Introductions
12 episodes - English - Latest episode: about 5 years ago -This series brings together lectures given by members of Oxford’s Faculty of English as Open Day taster lectures or as introductory lectures for undergraduates. The series covers a diverse range of topics, drawing on the Faculty’s wide-ranging research into English Language and Literature.
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Episodes
Theatre, 1660-1760 - The Arrival of the Actress
March 14, 2019 16:08 - 53 minutes - 438 MB VideoDavid Taylor on the arrival of female actors on the stage. In this undergraduate lecture, David Taylor describes one of the key theatrical developments of Restoration drama, the arrival of female actors on the stage.
Theatre, 1660-1760 - Restoration and Change
March 14, 2019 16:07 - 47 minutes - 554 MB VideoDavid Taylor lectures on the reopening of the theatres in the 1660s. In this undergraduate lecture, David Taylor considers the new forms, practices, and spaces of drama that emerged following the reopening of the theatres in the 1660s.
Race and Empire, 1660-1760
March 14, 2019 16:05 - 25 minutes - 256 MB VideoRuth Scobie lectures on race and empire, 1660-1760. In this introductory lecture, Ruth Scobie outlines some of the historical contexts of literature written between 1660 and 1660, looking in particular at the topics of race and empire.
Drama and the Theatre, 1660-1760
March 14, 2019 16:03 - 26 minutes - 263 MB VideoAbigail Williams lectures on the staging of Restoration drama. In this introductory lecture, Abigail Williams investigates the staging of Restoration drama, exploring the effects of such staging conditions on plays written in this period.
Literature and Gender, 1660-1760
March 07, 2019 15:40 - 19 minutes - 213 MB VideoKathleen Keown considers representations of gender in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In this introductory lecture, Kathleen Keown considers representations of gender in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, before turning to women’s writing of the same period.
Manuscript and Print, 1660–1760
March 07, 2019 15:30 - 23 minutes - 51.1 MB VideoCarly Watson outlines the material forms in which literary texts circulated between 1660 and 1760. In this introductory lecture, Carly Watson outlines the material forms in which literary texts circulated between 1660 and 1760.
What is a Literary Period?
March 07, 2019 15:22 - 19 minutes - 150 MB VideoClare Bucknell considers how we define a literary period. In this introductory lecture, Clare Bucknell considers how we define a literary period and highlights some of the problems with period boundaries, drawing examples from texts written from circa 1660 to circa 1760.
Nineteenth-Century Stuff - Dickens, Paperwork and Paper Sorrows
March 07, 2019 15:09 - 23 minutes - 188 MB VideoSophie Ratcliffe investigates the material culture of the Victorians, using examples from Charles Dickens. In this Open Day taster lecture, Sophie Ratcliffe investigates the material culture of the Victorians, looking particularly the novels of Charles Dickens in the context of nineteenth-century paper-making.
What is a War Poem?
March 07, 2019 15:02 - 20 minutes - 207 MB VideoKate McLoughlin explores how we might define a war poem. In this Open Day taster lecture, Kate McLoughlin explores how we might define a war poem, looking in particular at some of D H Lawrence’s verse.
Diaries as Literature - The Case of Virginia Woolf
March 07, 2019 14:21 - 24 minutes - 256 MB VideoMichael Whitworth considers whether diaries are literature, looking particularly at the diaries of Virginia Woolf. In this Open Day taster lecture, Michael Whitworth considers whether diaries are literature and how women writers exploit the possibilities of this genre, looking particularly at the diaries of Virginia Woolf.
Character in Modern Drama
March 07, 2019 14:17 - 28 minutes - 176 MB VideoKirsten Shepherd-Barr investigates 'character' in Modern Drama In this Open Day taster lecture, Kirsten Shepherd-Barr investigates how the notion of ‘character’ in theatre has changed over time, drawing examples from Beckett, Pinter, Churchill, Kane and Crimp.
Brilliant Paradoxes and Corrosive Epigrams; or Why Oscar Wilde Went to Trial
March 04, 2019 16:37 - 31 minutes - 319 MB VideoSos Eltis looks at Oscar Wilde’s 1895 trial. In this Open Day taster lecture, Sos Eltis explores the complex causes which motivated Oscar Wilde’s 1895 court cases.