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Publicity photo of Charlie Chaplin for the film Modern Times (1936).

Passé ou Classique? – How Old Films can Hold Up for a Modern Audience

“As modern cinema becomes increasingly commercialised, films are primarily lauded for their entertainment value, a well-known cast of actors and provocative subject matter over form and visual innovation. These trends, which favour fast-paced editing and action-filled plots, might be said to have blunted our capacity for critical observation and undermined our visual literacy.” Lorelei Fatima…

opinion

Image Credit: Imogen Forest, taken in Italy

We should have left ‘whimsy’ in 2025

Whimsical. Around a year ago, this word (and all its variations) sprouted roots on the internet. It somehow blossomed amidst the backdrop of heightened global seriousness, with people using it to share creative projects and spontaneous endeavours. It was not long before brands latched on, and the word started popping up in adverts, in TikTok…

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Tony Blair, 9 July 2010. Photo published by the Office of the Prime Minister of Kosovo.

Britain’s prophet steps forward

“Oh, oh! Agony, agony! Again the awful pains of prophecy are on me, maddening as they fall… What if no man believe me?” Thus cries the tortured Cassandra in Aeschylus’ seminal tragedy Agamemnon. Cursed by Apollo with a gift of prophecy which is never to be believed, Cassandra is one of the most tragic figures…

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Van on fire during the 2024 Southport Riots

Call the violence in Belfast out for what it is: Pogroms

I refuse to use the phrases “anti-immigration riots”, “violent disorder”, “disruptions” or “unrest” to describe what ethnic minorities and those who present as visibly Muslim, have been experiencing in Belfast over the last few days. And this is not the first time we have lived through this. A quick Google search shows that a Pogrom…

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Global Affairs

COLUMNS

Photo of the Oxford skyline.

Low Concept: Pursuit for its Own Sake

“My thesis is not one implying a value to decentring work or academic commitments. It is one concerned with giving enjoyments and pursuits for pleasure the priority that they are due.”

Collage for Risk Appetite.

Risk Appetite: On Long Tables and Still Eating Alone

“The next time at a long dining table, I’ll treat it like it’s an Oxford exam I’ve studied for: I’ll eat, ask questions about others that stem from genuine curiosity, and take peace in the fact that I’ve already done all the preparation I can and that it’s time to put it into practice.”

CULTURES

LIfestyle

An elegant, old-fashioned lady walking her dogs along a beach

Walking in silence: a lost art?

On brighter days, I’ll venture to the Bodleian with Bad Bunny, or Stevie Wonder blasting through my ears. Come rain or shine, the music seems to meet me where I…

Graffiti on a wall

The Exportation of British Misogyny

The sound of accordion, and the sweet heavy smell of cinnamon and spices drifted pleasantly through the small winding streets, dappled with pale April sunlight. Yet, despite this beauty, something…

Identity

An image of the NIV Bible, 1 Corinthians 13

We Will Continue to Love

Isobel Gurnett writes from a pro-LGBT Christian perspective, confronting the homophobic rhetoric hiding behind the religion.

sports


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