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Snow

‘If something is frozen we say it’s unchanging — that it stays.’ Nina Sablan’s creative piece about snow and its effects on our landscape. Image Credit: Nina Sablan.

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Oxford

Lord Hague, in ceremonial Chancellor gown, gestures in his speech

The Chancellor’s Intervention: Hague on “Safe Spaces”, Gaza, and Ukraine

A year on from the first round of the election of the new Chancellor, its victor, William Hague, took to the Cheltenham Literature Festival in mid-October to comment on his ideals for the University, the current Starmer Government, and the development of Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan. Noah Allerton explores the Chancellor’s remarks.

opinion

Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Why I Refuse to Wear The Red Poppy

It is the 11th of November again, the date when the guns fell silent in 1918, when an armistice was signed in France marking the end of more than four years of devastating conflict.  This is why we all remember the war on November 11th with an artificial red poppy to commemorate the military personnel…

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The Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1563), public domain

Do different languages change the way we think?

According to the legend of Babel, the existence of different languages on Earth began as a punishment. Humanity, daring to build its tower skyward, was scattered by God and condemned to mutual unintelligibility. Later centuries imagined a return to the lost original language. The 17th-century philosopher Francis Bacon, for instance, thought Chinese characters might offer…

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Global Affairs

COLUMNS

An image of the Radcliffe Camera against a blue sky

Rare aesthetic: being humbled by study influencers

“Whilst I was spending hours in the library on one essay, they were sauntering through assignments in infuriatingly short time-stamped minutes.” Téa Sand talks about the unrealistic standard set by study influencers, and trying to break free of it. Image by Leon Moorhouse used with permission.

An illustration of a map of Western Europe with an arrow connecting Leipzig and Oxford

Return Flight: Spying on my old self

“I assumed things would feel different this year – fewer friends, more stress from impending finals – but I didn’t realise I would feel so different.” Esmé Hubbert discusses the differences from the simplicity of first year and the changes that come with moving out of college. Illustration by Leon Moorhouse used with permission.

A man sits at a table alone, eating a bowl of ramen.

Risk Appetite: On Relationships with Food and Food Influencers

“I thought spending mealtimes studying instead of eating would give me some sort of leverage over my peers, who weren’t spending that time being ‘productive’ in the traditional sense” Valerie Wu discusses the relationship between eating and studying and how LA and food influencers helped improve it. Image by Guian Bolisay, CC BY-SA 2.0 ,…

CULTURES

A photo of the Fleet Foxes vinyl cover

Fleet Foxes: an album worthy of attention

“Fleet Foxes’ eponymous debut album is the gift that keeps on giving for lovers of acoustic, vocally-interesting tunes”. Olivia-Mae Butterfield discusses her favourite underrated album. Image by Olivia-Mae Butterfield, used…

LIfestyle

Identity

Photo of a woman using a phone and a laptop.

A Camera Roll in Language

“For me, the notes app is a psychological tool. It is a way of mediating thought and reality, condensing messy webs of perception into their own contained and defined widget.”…


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