Episodes
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Poetry, in its attempt to take the ineffable things of life and put them into words, is an incredibly subtle form of language use. Which means that translating a poem between languages is anything but straightforward. In todayâs episode, we talk to two minds about the art of doing just that.
Born in East Germany in 1962, Durs GrĂŒnbein is one of the most prominent German poets of his generation. Known for often dealing with political matters in his work, GrĂŒnbein has published more than thirty books of poetry and prose. Karen Leeder, who is currently a BUA/Oxford Einstein Visiting Fellow, is a professor of modern German literature at Oxford University and has translated several of Durs' poetry collections into English.
In a wide-ranging conversation, we discuss poetry, politics, and the delicate art of translation.
Durs GrĂŒnbein, German poet and essayist, born in Dresden in 1962
Prof. Karen Leeder, British writer and translator. She is Schwarz Taylor Chair of the German Language and Literature, University of Oxford. -
For those who believe, religious belief is something that impacts all aspects of life, including how one views the environment. But how has religious belief shaped modern views toward sustainability? And in this time of multiple environmental crises, could religion play a role in potentially solving them?
Thatâs what my two guests today Philipp Ăhlmann and Severine Deneulin have been looking at in their joint research project funded by the Oxford Berlin Research Partnership.
Philipp Ăhlmann is a researcher based at Humboldt-UniversitĂ€t zu Berlin and researches questions of religion and sustainability, with a focus on African Christianity. And Severine Deneulin is based at the University of Oxford where she has been working on the relationship between religion and development. We discuss how religious belief within Christianity and Islam has impacted how we have come to treat the natural world, as well as influenced the modern move toward sustainability.
Dr SĂ©verine Deneulin, Director of International Development at the Laudato Siâ Research Institute and Associate Fellow at the Oxford Department of International Development
Dr Philipp Ăhlmann, Head of the Research Programme on Religious Communities and Sustainable Development, Humboldt-UniversitĂ€t zu Berlin -
Episodes manquant?
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At any one moment, at least a few regions of the world are undergoing great social upheaval. From war and economic collapse to crime and pandemics. What follows are often large flows of people fleeing the situation. But this can also create dramatic changes in how people feel about their security, and not just in the home country itself, but also in the neighbouring countries that people flee to.
How exactly citizens living through these situations react, and what influences their sense of security is something that Dr. Annette Idler, of the University of Oxford examines. In our conversation about her current project âTransitions and Social Cohesion in Context of Multiple Crisesâ which she is leading along with Freie UniversitĂ€t Berlin professor SĂ©rgio Costa, we talk about what it really is that influences people's perceptions and experiences of security. And to what extent refugee flows and organized crime matter in the breakdown of social cohesion.
Dr. Annette Idler is Director of the Global Security Programme and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Oxfordâs Pembroke College and Blavatnik School of Government. -
Transitioning to a clean economy which relies on renewable, or carbon-free electricity generation is essential for avoiding the worst of climate change. But what role does the public play in this transformation, and what forms of participation do ordinary citizens have at their disposal to take part?
Thatâs what Jake Barnes and Sabine Hielscher looked at in their joint research project called âPublic Participation for Energy Transitions.â In our conversation about their seed-funded project, we discuss why public participation is valuable when it comes to the current energy transition, the myriad forms such participation can take, and the opportunities and challenges that may come from the current energy crisis facing Europe.
With Dr. Jake Barnes, Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford, and Dr. Sabine Hielscher, Institut fĂŒr ökologische Wirtschaftsforschung (IĂW). -
Our bodies are ruled by the daily solar cycle of the earth. But we also all have our own internal biological clocks, which more or less sync up to this daily rhythm. This internal clock is crucial not only for our patterns of sleeping and waking but for all kinds of activities which our bodies and cells undertake.
But if our internal clocks and that of the outside world are out of sync, then the consequences can be profound and come with serious health implications. This is particularly problematic for blind people whose circadian clocks arenât kept synced to the outside worldâs rhythms by exposure to sunlight.
Our two guests today, in a project supported by the Oxford Berlin Research Partnership, are working on a new method to better measure and diagnose these disruptions to someoneâs circadian rhythm; something which can then be used to resync the patientâs internal clock and improve their quality of life. They are Achim Kramer, the head of Chronobiology at CharitĂ© â UniversitĂ€tsmedizin Berlin, and Russell Foster, a professor of sleep and circadian neuroscience at the University of Oxford. We learn about their work, and why these circadian rhythms are so vital to our health and happiness. -
You might not think that artificial intelligence has much to do with puzzle-solving parrots, but that's exactly what our two guests today combine in their envelope-pushing research. The team is led by Alex Kacelnik who specializes in animal behaviour, and Oliver Brock, who is an expert in robotics and AI.
Their research involves filming cockatoo parrots as they solve novel kinetic mechanical problems. This video is then analyzed and used to help create a robot powered by artificial intelligence that can solve similar problems. In the process, they're exploring some of the most fundamental questions about the nature of intelligence.
Alex Kacelnik, Emeritus Professor of Behavioural Ecology at the University of Oxford, and Oliver Brock, Professor at the Technische UniversitĂ€t Berlin, talk about their interdisciplinary project âParrobots â Understanding physical problem solving in parrots and robotsâ. -
From the British Museum in London to the new Humboldt Forum in Berlin, museums across Europe are filled with precious ancient artifacts sourced from around the world. But how those artifacts actually ended up in the collections of these museums is, more often than not, connected to stories of colonial conquest, war and violence â something that up until relatively recently was largely forgotten or ignored. But two professors are hoping to change that.
Dan Hicks is an archeology professor at the University of Oxford, Bénédicte Savoy is an art historian based at Technische UniverstiÀt Berlin, and together they are working on a project funded by the Oxford Berlin Research Partnership.
The project is called The Restitution of Knowledge and aims to uncover, document, and share the knowledge of the unjust means by which many of these artifacts came to be sitting in European museums. We discuss what their research has uncovered, what it means for museums, and what they think should happen to the objects that have been found to have been taken in illegitimate ways -
Every day through our computers and devices, a myriad of apps and services track our behaviour in precise detail. Most of this information is collected and analysed by companies that are trying to sell us things; whether itâs Amazon trying to sell us products, or Google looking to sell ads that are precisely targeted to us as individuals.
But could this wealth of data also be used in ways that actually benefit wider society? Thatâs what economists and data-scientists Fabian Braesemann and Fabian Stephany are hoping to do with DWG, a Berlin-based company that they are currently founding as a planned spinout from Oxford University. The idea was born when the two founders applied for project funding to the OX/BER Research Partnership.
As we explore in the podcast, by combing data sets in novel ways DWG is able to shed new light on complex societal dynamics: from looking at the economic vulnerabilities from Covid, to finding ways of predicting gentrification. This information can then be used to help governments and organisations make better decisions.
Fabian Braesemann and Fabian Stephany are both based at the Oxford Internet Institute, where they are research associates.