Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation (OCCT)
Een podcast door Oxford University
39 Afleveringen
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Translation as Afterlife
Gepubliceerd: 24-2-2017 -
“Forgotten Europe”: Translating Marginalised Languages
Gepubliceerd: 10-2-2017 -
Between Languages: Working in and out on Translation
Gepubliceerd: 30-11-2016 -
Literature Beyond Literary Studies: Intermediality and Interdisciplinarity
Gepubliceerd: 1-11-2016 -
Comparative Criticism: What Is It and Why Do We Do It?
Gepubliceerd: 19-10-2016 -
Intercultural Literary Practices
Gepubliceerd: 9-11-2015 -
Fiction and Other Minds
Gepubliceerd: 9-11-2015 -
Extremist Translation and the Deformation Zone
Gepubliceerd: 24-7-2015 -
Lunchtime talk with Italian journalist Antonio Armano
Gepubliceerd: 23-6-2015 -
Translation and Ekphrasis: Dante and the visual arts
Gepubliceerd: 24-2-2015 -
Intercultural Tales
Gepubliceerd: 17-2-2015 -
To the Lighthouse
Gepubliceerd: 9-2-2015 -
OCCT event - The Creativity of Criticism part four
Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2014 -
OCCT event - The Creativity of Criticism part three
Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2014 -
OCCT event - The Creativity of Criticism part two
Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2014 -
Languages of Criticism - Translation and Comparison part two
Gepubliceerd: 17-12-2014 -
Unbuttoning Catullus
Gepubliceerd: 1-12-2014 -
Other Worlding
Gepubliceerd: 14-11-2014 -
Kirmen Uribe - Reading and in discussion with Daniela Omlor and Xon de Ros
Gepubliceerd: 14-11-2014 -
Cultures of Mind-Reading: The Novel and Other Minds - ‘Narrative and/as Heterophenomenology: Modelling Nonhuman Experiences in Storyworlds’
Gepubliceerd: 20-9-2014
The discipline of Comparative Literature is changing. Its Eurocentric heritage has been challenged by various formulations of ‘world literature’, while new media and new forms of artistic production are bringing urgency to comparative thinking across literature, film, the visual arts and music. The resulting questions of method are both intellectually compelling and central to the future of the humanities. To confront them, our research programme brings together experts from the disciplines of English, Medieval and Modern Languages, Oriental Studies, and Classics, and draws in collaborators from Music, Visual Art, Film, Philosophy and History.