The eternal fascination of artists, scientists, film-makers and writers alike, we explore the myriad manifestations of humankind’s engagement with time – from scratches on stone to the Theory of Relativity, from art-house cinema to the metaphysical novel.
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Join this course to enhance your conversational skills in a range of simple everyday situations.
Join us in Oxford for a thought-provoking day event exploring the lives of people in the medieval Islamicate East, from empire to everyday.
Join us in Oxford to explore the experience of visitors in gardens then, now and in the future through talks from leading experts in researching, caring for and providing access to historic gardens.
This 10-week consolidation course is based on the syllabus of the previous two terms and is primarily tailored to meet the needs of students who completed the weekly class, but new students who are at the appropriate level of proficiency are also welcome.
Fast-track your journey from technical expert to leader. Gain practical skills to manage teams, balance leadership with process, and drive high performance. Learn how to motivate, prioritise, and transition into management with confidence.
This course is for anyone who would like to learn to read beneath the surface, pay attention to language and form, and become a critical reader.
Your methodology chapter is vital. Examine how we can come to know and inform others about each unique approach to original research through various methodologies. Part of the Graduate School's postgraduate research skills training programme.
Join our experts to understand the role of colonialism in shaping contemporary cities. Critically examine how colonial logics in urban development can reinforce spatial inequalities, dispossession and exclusion, and how we can ‘counterplot’ against them.
How can we begin to understand the spiritual lives of prehistoric people? When do religious ideologies first appear on the human evolutionary timescale? Using both anthropology and archaeological evidence these and many other questions are examined.
This course introduces you to the basic principles of Classical Latin. It provides a firm basis of grammar, sentence structure and vocabulary of the language, through which you will be able to read and translate into English Roman drama in adaptation.
Enhance your knowledge of some of the most important and often counter-intuitive aspects of signal integrity that are a must for all engineers, whether they work at relatively low-speed or on cutting-edge signalling.
