St Anne's College

St Anne's stands out in Oxford as a college that is down to earth, modern, informal and open to the world. It also has a determined sense of its academic purpose.

  • 40 minutes 5 seconds
    How bad is the current crisis of American democracy?
    Professor Adam Smith gives a talk to alumni entitled "How bad is the current crisis of American democracy?" The current sense of crisis is driven by the anxiety about creeping authoritarianism and corruption, a dis-informed electorate and unaccountable social media giants. But American democracy has always been ‘in crisis’ ever since the idea of the US as a ‘democracy’ emerged in the 1830s. How does the current sense of crisis compare to those of the past, and does the US any longer have the resources to address the democratic challenges it faces?
    4 October 2019, 9:40 am
  • 32 minutes 37 seconds
    At the Frontlines of Change: Feminist Leadership Transforming Lives - Devaki Jain Lecture
    Noeleen Heyzer gives the 2016 Devaki Jain Lecture. Noeleen Heyzer is former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations. Born in Singapore, she was the first woman from the South to head the United Nations Development Fund for Women and the first woman to head the Economic and Social Commission for Asia Pacific since its founding in 1947. Noeleen Heyzer is an active member of the women’s movement in her region and carried that passion into the UN.
    10 March 2017, 4:32 pm
  • 1 hour 3 minutes
    Our built heritage: a gem or a millstone? What's worth keeping and why? - St Anne's Gaudy Seminar 2016
    The 2016 St Anne's Gaudy Seminar. With Helen Ghosh (Director-General of the National Trust), Caroline Stanford (Historian and Head of Engagement at The Landmark Trust), Liane Hartley (Co-Founder of Mend) and Dr Michael Fradley (Research Assistant on ‘Endangered Archaeology’ project).
    15 November 2016, 6:28 pm
  • 30 minutes 48 seconds
    The UK, Germany, and the European Union
    Talk given by the former German Ambassador, Georg Boomgaarden, at St Anne's College in November 2014. Part of the inaugural international seminar and dinner at the College.
    11 March 2015, 12:59 pm
  • 43 minutes 22 seconds
    Is the printed word dead?
    Kathryn Sutherland, Drummond Moir and Sara Lloyd give talk for the St Anne's college Alumni Weekend 2014
    15 October 2014, 7:50 pm
  • 51 minutes
    Diseases of Modern Life
    Professor Sally Shuttleworth, Head of the Humanities Division, gives a talk for the St Anne's Alumni Weekend 2014
    15 October 2014, 7:42 pm
  • 21 minutes 56 seconds
    Mathematics in Medicine and Biology
    Dr Sarah Waters (Fellow and Tutor in Applied Mathematics) gives a talk for the St Anne's College Maths reunion
    3 February 2014, 3:27 pm
  • 34 minutes 12 seconds
    A History of Maths at St Anne's
    Dr Graham Nelson (Supernumerary Fellow and Lecturer in Mathematics), gives a talk for the St Anne's College Maths reunion
    3 February 2014, 3:23 pm
  • 30 minutes
    Scaling Hilary: A world-class maths education for all
    Junaid Mubeen (Mathematics, 2004), gives a talk for the St Anne's College MAthematics reuion
    3 February 2014, 3:19 pm
  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    Translation as Literature
    Matthew Reynolds, Fellow and Tutor in English Language and Literature, Oxford, gives a talk for the 2013 Oxford Alumni Weekend. Translations are never as good as their originals - or so we tend to think. But why should that be? Surely translation can involve gain as well as loss? But, if it does that, doesn't it stop being translation and turn into something else: a 'version', 'interpretation' or 'poem in its own right'? The 2013 St Anne's Founding Fellows Lecture will explore these questions with the help of a range of wonderful translations into English, such as Dante, Virgil, Homer, Sappho, Zamyatin, Sereni, Rouzeau, Dryden, Pope, Ciaran Carson, Natasha Randall, Peter Robinson and Susan Wickes. We will discover what it means for a piece of writing to be at once a translation and a work of literature.
    29 October 2013, 10:46 am
  • 45 minutes 4 seconds
    Where will Tomorrow's Food Come From - and What will be the Consequences?
    The St Anne's Gaudy Seminar explores the topic of food security, focusing in particular on sustainability, supply and demand, and aid and trade. How will science, ecology and consumers have an impact on how food is produced and distributed?
    30 September 2013, 5:59 pm
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