Monday 21st July 2025
Blog Page 447

OPINION: History tells us that the Conservatives’ PR switch is destined for failure

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In 2015, the Conservatives under David Cameron ran a relentlessly negative election campaign which made tedium an art. Billboards proclaimed: “A Recovering Economy” and depicted a large wrecking ball emblazoned with the tagline: “Don’t Let Labour Wreck It.” Infamously, there were warnings of “Chaos with Ed Miliband.” Only a year later, the Conservatives delivered Brexit, the most radical event of recent British political history. And yet May’s promise in 2017 was even more boring than Cameron’s. “Strong and stable” did not work as well, leading to a surprise advance for Corbyn’s Labour, the radical option. But the Tories’ lacklustre campaign showed that, even as they ripped apart the country, they wanted to stress an idea of continuity and, above all, competence.

That all feels like 100 years ago now, and the contrast with the Tories of today is telling and important. A botched response to Covid-19 and a government hungry to open up the country despite the risks of easing lockdown too early reveal a government of incompetents who, unlike Theresa May’s administration, are blasé about their inability to rule and reckless in their pursuit of risk. How did we get here?

For most of their modern existence, the Conservatives have been the natural party of government. The Tories have overseen long periods of stable and stodgy government many times in the past, under managerial leaders like Harold Macmillan and Stanley Baldwin. The British political cycle, for much of our democratic history, has been characterised by long periods of Tory management interspersed with governments of progressive change. This dynamic has shaped the Tories’ self-image. Even when the Tories enact sweeping reforms they are sold to the electorate under the guise of prudent moderation.

This ongoing PR project has been helped at times by an extreme and disorganised Labour party. Thatcher was the status quo when opposed by Michael Foot, and Jeremy Corbyn has a special gift for making practically anyone else seem comfortable and familiar. Nonetheless, this Tory brand of no-nonsense competence has successfully reinforced public perceptions in and of itself. The Conservatives have for decades played to their strengths. They know that most voters in the past did not look to them as the inspiring choice or as a chance to shake up the system. But they could count on angst about dangerous spending and weak defence. The fact that those like Corbyn have deserved these charges should not obscure the fact that at other times, the Tories have tried the same old tricks on fairly safe Labour leaders. Sometimes it has been a laughable flop. Nobody was fooled by warnings of: “New Labour: New Danger.” At other times, though, it has worked well. For example, in 2015, Middle England were convinced of the risks of “Red Ed” very easily.

Political changes can take a long time to come to the surface. The brazen disregard for their time-honoured public image which this Conservative Party is demonstrating now is the product of 30+ years of reinvention. Each generation of Tories since Thatcher has learned the benefits and allurements of acting the daring maverick. The right-wing Eurosceptic backbench rebels of the 1990s, John Major’s “bastards,” showed their fellow Tories the outsized gains available to those holding extreme positions and refusing to compromise for the sake of plausibility and possibility. Those rebels were the ideological grandparents of the Brexiteers, like Michael Gove and Boris Johnson, whose taste of insurgency and anti-establishment rhetoric in the referendum campaign made addicts of them.

The addiction for the populist and the risky spread, contaminating the whole party. The shock result of 2016 set alight the ideological firewood that has been building for decades. Suddenly, the bona fides of Tory loyalty were not about being sensible. The ‘lunatics’ took over the asylum, and installed Boris Johnson as Prime Minister.

Corbyn and the promise to “Get Brexit Done” in 2019 meant that the full ramifications of this sea-change were not fully recognised. The imposition of a global pandemic on Johnson’s plans have brought it to the forefront. It is now that we see a Tory administration whose top echelons are peopled by the likes of Jacob Rees-Mogg. Rees-Mogg clamours to send parliament back to normal despite the concerns of MPs, while Dominic Cummings, the ultimate right-wing revolutionary, obeys one set of rules and imposes another on the rest.

The result has not just been substantive in policy terms but damaging in political ones. The rise in polls of Keir Starmer’s unthreatening Labour shows that the public have discerned this shift in the Conservatives and are no longer in the mood for it. It remains to be seen if Boris Johnson, our most illustrious political arsonist, will find himself swept away by the fire he encouraged in his own party.

The Sick Worm

O Worm, thou art sick,
Thy earthy tendrils long to prick
The burgeoning bud.
You may flourish in a flower,
A site of pleasure, sickly plucked.
That won’t wither her sweet power;
May Venus’ jaw snap shut thy luck.
That crimson bed you burrowed in,
Attacked by worms who came before,
Mocks mortal flesh and mortifies
Those tempted by such sensuous gore.

KitKat

All of me/Why not take all of me/Can’t you see/I’m no good without you/Take my lips/I want to loose them/Take my arms/I’ll never use them

He cut and diced in a white hat
She fetched and carried what he diced and cut
He fed her, seeing red at her clumsy hands on busy nights.
Once a week, she begged the room to take her and the room ate her up
He did not hover above, he did not lie below, but he wore that stupidly clean white hat.
He called her KitKat.

He said he wants two of his fat, oily bars in her smart, fleshy mouth
KitKat half smiles, her insides hollowed out by that sick joke.

She was paid, wordless, pressed against, still
ridden by blameless guilt.
Lying down like an upset wine bottle,
smeared across the floor
by men, everywhere, in white hats.

Image credit: Ky via Flickr, CC 2.0; image has been cropped

cry, tears

cry the way you cry when you
reach the shore again, cry the way
the way, ouch
cry the way you cry then

break the way a cracker
breaks announcing another
cycle of cold warm hot water
hot warm cold, the latter
and the former
cry the way
only in
the way
you cry then

like a wave of
rain cry like satur
ated pools of
pulsating swimm
ing seas

record it in the hours
each and ever
each
and every
everyone of them

cry like that like the way
you smash the hour
with the hurricane
of tears spread
on the edge of
every glass
stained
cried uncried
any ever every
other cry notice
able like a passer
by in a sea of people

feeling intact
feeling ether
eal

atrocity, my
tears
don’t cry without me

Ventilators Aren’t The Miracle Machines We Prayed For

In the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic, ventilators – or the sparsity thereof – caused a great deal of distress to healthcare professionals, politicians, and the British people. The bulk acquisition of these devices became a priority for the floundering government, wanting to reassure its citizens that they would have access to this seemingly life-saving technology should they need it. Indeed, news reports often showed ICUs packed with intubated patients being kept alive by the rhythmic propulsion of air into their lungs, which had failed to function unassisted. It seemed as though the number of ventilators per capita was an important predictor of a nation’s ability to tackle this crisis. But then, it all changed.

NHS reports soon showed that ventilated patients were unusually likely to die, with two-thirds of them not making it out of the ICU alive. Recently, doctors have refrained from using these machines, noting better patient outcomes. Ventilators aren’t entirely useless for the treatment of coronavirus-induced respiratory distress, but they offer diminishing returns as they don’t address the other important factor that determines pulmonary gas exchange: blood flow.

Keeping appropriate levels of oxygen in the blood – a big issue for acutely-ill COVID-19 patients – involves the close matching of ventilation (air flow) to perfusion (blood flow) in the individual air sacs of the lungs, the alveoli. From the beginning of this crisis, a huge focus was placed on ventilating patients who were struggling to breathe by themselves. Mechanical ventilators appeared to be absolutely essential in treating end-stage COVID-19 patients on ICUs. Whilst the ventilatory aspect was overwhelmingly addressed, perfusion of the lungs was mostly ignored. There is little benefit in ventilating a lung that is not well perfused – extra oxygen cannot be ‘picked up’ by the blood and carried to the rest of the body. Consider a train (the blood) coming into a station (the lung; or more specifically, one of its many alveoli): cramming the station’s platform with passengers (oxygen) is no good if the train is unable to reach the platform due to broken tracks.

In fact, autopsies have shown COVID-19 lungs to be full of clots (broken tracks), occluding alveolar blood flow and making the extra ventilation somewhat useless. These are presumably caused by inflammation of blood vessels and enhanced clotting pathways. Recent findings indicate that micro-clots are nine times as prevalent in COVID-19 lungs as in those of patients who succumbed to the flu. Pathologists in Italy started properly discovering these blockages around mid-March, by which point the disease had already ravaged through the country; only ten days earlier, ethical guidelines given to Italian doctors stated it may be necessary to withdraw care from critical patients, prioritising those with a better chance of survival. Considering the virus was so new and misunderstood, it seems surprising that post-mortem studies weren’t carried out sooner.

Naturally, anti-clotting drugs – anticoagulants – were suggested as a potential treatment for those affected by the disease. However, the medical community took too long to evaluate the efficacy of this intervention. There are, finally, ongoing trials aiming to assess just how beneficial this treatment could be. These show mixed results, but the consensus is that a higher level of anticoagulation is probably required for COVID-19 patients, compared to the standard dose that is traditionally administered on the ICU. A lot of these studies focus on advanced cases, where it is potentially too late as clots have already formed. At the end of April, the NHS commissioned a group of experts to provide clinical guidance on the use of anticoagulants in COVID-19 patients. The NHS is yet to release this guidance to its clinicians.

Although the effect of the novel coronavirus on the body is highly complex and multi-faceted, the initial rush to ventilate deteriorating patients may well have overshadowed other important aspects of the virus’ attack mechanism. How many more lives could have been saved without the blind focus on ventilators?

Image attribution: https://pixabay.com/photos/hospital-bed-doctor-surgery-1802679/

The Road to Michaelmas, What Can We Expect?

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The University of Oxford has been clear in their latest communication to students: they hope to resume in-person teaching for small groups and tutorials in Michaelmas term.  For many this is welcome news, and certainly there are few amongst us who don’t yearn for life to return to normal, to be able to go for a coffee or a pint in the city centre, or return to cosy research seminars, laboratories, and libraries.  But for many returning students and offer-holders, the decision over whether to accept their place, or return to Oxford, is difficult and stressful to make with little or no information.  It is in the University’s and individual colleges’ best interest to provide us with clear guidance on how they are preparing, and what their red lines will be.

It is great to see Oxford’s acknowledgement that vulnerable, and some international students, will be unable to attend in person this autumn, and the promise that they can attend online. However, it would be helpful to see how that would work, such as for final year and graduate seminars. We also have to be very aware that many of the tutors fall into the vulnerable category and have their own concerns about the return to in-person teaching. 

Not enough information has been provided to make students, particularly non-UK, feel comfortable in their decision to attend/return. International students have several levels of logistical challenges to attending, including uncertainty around what happens in the case of another lockdown, concerns about the financial costs of additional travel or accommodation if this occurs, questions of whether they can book a flight, if they will have to quarantine upon arriving, and uncertainty around if they can even get a visa. 

Many are calling for all classes to be offered online.  We all know that much of what Oxford offers is not available over Teams, and that as wonderful as it is that the Bodleian has risen to the occasion, there are still far more works not available digitally than are.  Online is far from ideal, but we need to be realistic about the likelihood that at least part of the year will require online learning.  For international students, who make up 40% of the student body, the discussion of value, risk, and alternatives is ongoing.  Within a month, international students will have to decide whether to commit to coming to Oxford.  The University needs to let them know now what will be in place to help them no matter what happens. 

This is not just about international students though – the quarantine issue will be relevant to all of us.  When tracking and tracing is at full capacity, it is inevitable that multiple students in college accommodation will need to self-isolate.  And since anyone that came into close contact with an infected student will probably need to isolate for two weeks, that conceivably means their seminars will have to go online for that period as well. Since nobody can know what the UK, or the world, will look like in 3 months, obviously no promises can be made.  But clarity around what it would look like in the worst-case scenario, and how a likely second wave will be handled, could allow students to at least make a more informed decision. Oxford is understandably trying to retain as many students as possible.  But by not providing information on the plans and procedures that will be implemented, the University is creating distrust, worry, and frustration. 

It will also be important for colleges, in particular, to set expectations ahead of time, including the fact that most gatherings will not be allowed, and that likely includes common rooms, college bars, and hall, which the University is now insinuating will be open.  If that is not possible (very likely), what alternatives will be put in place for feeding students, especially those that live in college?  And what will they do, alongside the JCR/MCRs, to foster the collegial relationships that are such a valued part of the Oxford experience, and which provide invaluable welfare support?

There are several crucial questions which I believe Oxford and its member colleges need to address to help all students feel safe and confident in their ability to return.  Rather than the current communication, which is based on a hoped-for best-case scenario, we need to understand their red lines.  These include (and this is far from exhaustive):

  1. What will the situation in the UK have to look like for colleges to reopen for accommodation, and for colleges and faculties to return to small class teaching?  Conversely, what will be the criteria for closing again? 
  2. What plans will be in place for international students, those who become sick, or those who have been contacted as part of the track-and-trace scheme, to allow them to quarantine, especially if they are in college accommodation? 
  3. Will they be able to offer accommodation and catering to students that are unable to leave Oxford because of travel restrictions or familial circumstances? 
  4. How do they intend to encourage and enforce social distancing and isolation in colleges and university buildings?  And how large a role are they prepared to play in discouraging or punishing risky or unauthorised behavior outside official buildings?

I am writing this as a postgrad member of the University, an offer-holder, and an international student.  But I am also a year-round resident in Oxford, and have heard from neighbours and others in the community that they are worried about the return of students, with the increase of risky contact as Oxford’s narrow streets become crowded again.  Without making this a town vs gown, or an old vs young issue, we need to recognize that the student population has a significant presence in the community, and that whilst people in their 20s appear to have a lower risk of contracting a life-threatening case of COVID-19, those they interact with are often more vulnerable.  For this reason as well as the safety and health of its own student body, I would encourage Oxford to implement a COVID-19 code of conduct for students, requiring adherence to government and public health guidelines, with consequences for those who refuse to follow it.

In many ways we were lucky that the government-imposed lockdown came when it did this spring at the end of Hilary, a time when it was easy to pause classes, move students out of accommodation, and close facilities relatively quickly.  Presumably, Oxford is actively preparing in case that is required again.  We are less than three months away from pre-session courses, and many international students may need to arrive before that for quarantine.  At this point, colleges are still trying to work out how current students can return to collect their personal belongings safely, with pre-booked slots, social distancing, and hygiene guidelines in place.  Imagining that the situation will have changed enough that thousands of students can move into close quarters in late September feels like wishful thinking. 

Oxford, with its world-leading epidemiologists, scientists, and medical experts, is in a better position than many to anticipate and prepare for likely scenarios.  We should be taking the government’s guidance as a baseline, and then creating our own policy around what most scientists are suggesting is a probable second wave.  Rather than doing the minimum, the governors should use an abundance of caution in re-opening school and college facilities, in order to protect their students, but also to protect their future earnings and reputation from the potential devastation of being behind the curve.  We should, in other words, be leaders.

COVID-19 will still be a considerable concern when thousands of students are currently expected to return in October.  It will have an inevitable and serious impact on the next school year, but with proper planning, flexibility, and good communication, we should be able to weather this, not unlike the other plagues and crises Oxford has seen in its 900 year history. The best thing the University can do to ensure their students feel confident enough to return this autumn is be transparent about the plans in place as soon as possible.

Fresh old stuff that hurts in the right places

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The outcry was big when Edward Colston went for a swim. This is against history! This will make us forget, not reflect! But will it? A new kind of, yes, period drama suggests otherwise. With its own retelling of history, toppling its own statues, it is unashamedly presentist. Like Rhodes Must Fall it forces us to rethink what we want from the past, and to acknowledge that, in important ways, we’re bound to look at what was from the point of view of what is.

From Lady Macbeth to The Favourite, The Nightingale, and most recently The Great: all of these — sometimes comically, sometimes distressingly — offer a take on history different from what cinema audiences (or lockdown couch potatoes) would expect of films and shows set in seventeen-hundred-something. Their unorthodoxy has put a candidly impertinent question-mark after the word “history.” Is that still period drama?

In 2016 director William Oldroyd gave us Lady Macbeth, starring a captivating Florence Pugh in the lead. This is a dark, rural Victorian-era tale (loosely based on the 1865 Nikolai Leskov novella, adapted for the screen by Alice Birch) set in the claustrophobic setting of an oppressive, loveless marriage. What stuck, apart from a range of arresting character portraits and performances, was that — as Guardian reviewer Steven Rose put it — there were “practically more characters of colour in Lady Macbeth than there are in all the Austens, Dickenses and Downtons put together.” It wasn’t long before the matter went from observation to “controversy.” Was this historically accurate? Was it not deviating too far from the original text?

As usual, a closer look served as a gentle reminder of the fact that, very much to the contrary, Downton Abbey and co had frankly tended to systematically whitewash. Amma Asante’s 2013 Belle had of course already proven what serious period drama centring on black history can look like. But the reception of the — in this regard — much less ambitious Lady Macbeth, three years later, revealed how historical accuracy could serve as a proxy for prejudice against adding in supposed “unlikely” figures — and how the white normality of the Julian Fellowes universe was still stuck in cultural imagination.

Whitewashed history tends to go unnoticed because most audiences fall for the comfortable option of assuming that “that’s just what it was like back then.” So Lady Macbeth’s screenplay and casting did that for us: it offered proof of the alternative, but also a refreshing take on the dusty cottage industry — pace Colin Firth’s irresistible Mr.-Darcy-stare in Pride and Prejudice — of period drama. It seemed to ask: why don’t we just do it this way? Why does the genre have to be true to what was its own version of history all along?

An own version of history indeed. What Lady Macbeth hinted at, 2018’s The Favourite took to another level. We’re in early 18th century this time around, but this is no Joe Wright but a Yorgos Lanthimos. Set in an era in which people would do a lot for the privilege of attending a pineapple tasting, a magisterial Olivia Colman demonstrates to her audience that a serious absence of masculine ego works fantastically well. This wryly eccentric drama, complete with duck racing and ridiculously sumptuous palace life, but also an above-average amount of love for rodents and women, sets a whole other tone.

But then, yet again, there was good old Lord Dusty MacBookshelf. This time debate ensued on whether Queen Anne’s lesbianism depicted in The Favourite was true to the book. So? Ophelia Field, writing for the New Statesman, put the chatter to rest. While “there is no historical evidence for such carnal pleasures having been enjoyed,” she writes, “there is no way to rule them out categorically and that is the beauty of a fictionalisation.” But, a pretty awesome dance-off scene aside, the film does more than fictionalise by filling in the gaps of history-writing: “Lesbian love affairs leave notoriously fewer traces – such as illegitimate bastard children – on the historical bedsheets,” Field writes. And this is crucial: The Favourite may have messed with the chronicler’s quill, but it also exposed that which took place but simply less so in the diaries of men: the life of women.

Olivia Coleman and Emma Stone in The Favourite.

In 2019 another smashing flick brought a rarely-told story to the big screen. But The Nightingale was not funny. In fact it was one of those films you may have walked out of because you just couldn’t handle it — though not because it wasn’t an excellent production. The Nightingale is excellent, but in a grim, exacting way. Jennifer Kent, who previously brought us the slightly less pointed The Babadook, takes us to a place I must confess I’ve never ever seen filmed: 19th century Tasmania, then still known as penal colony Van Diemen’s Land. A magnificent duo of Aisling Franciosi and Baykali Ganambarr in the lead, alongside a Sam Claflin so frightening you forget to breathe, perform an intense struggle that’s both a powerfully interpretive and symbolic. The Nightingale is an in-your-face reckless portrayal of Australia’s brutal colonial history, arrestingly alive to gender, race, and colonial identities.

With The Nightingale the issue is slightly different than with The Favourite: historical accuracy is not taken more or less loosely for comical effect, but to allow the film to weave the brutal shock of colonial reality into the story of a female ex-convict taking revenge on her oppressors. This is historical fiction, not a bending of details or a filling in of gaps. And still: like The Favourite, this is history that makes us think and feel — and its exaggerations, inventions, and spins are key to that.

Finally, one more historically crazy accurate production: The Great. Written by The Favourite’s Tony McNamara together with Vanessa Alexander, this 2020 Hulu mini-series starring Elle Fanning as Catherine the Great and Nicholas Hoult (the boy from About a Boy) as Emperor Peter III of Russia nails it from minute one. This self-styled “occasionally true story” made lockdown a bit more bearable.

In it, we follow the story of Catherine who leaves her native Germany to marry Emperor Peter. Catherine had always wanted a bear for a pet, but Peter cares more about shooting “fucking ducks” than respecting women’s wishes. Although certainly less well-paced than The Favourite, sometimes indeed coming across as its “watered-down distillation”,and honestly a bit heavy on the vulgarisms, The Great still passes on the heirloom of period drama that makes you stop and wonder why the occasionally untrue bits still resonate. As McNamara explained his motivation contra period drama: “If I have to watch people tie their shoes with ribbons, I want to put a gun to my head. I think that was the thing.”

There is a theme in all this. Whether hilarious or sad, uncomfortable or scary, what Lady Macbeth, The Favourite, The Nightingale, and The Great all have in common is that none of them even try to make us relive an authentic version of the past. They make it obvious that they’ll disappoint that notion: but what they offer in its stead might well be richer. They amplify silenced voices, and they visualise what it looks like when present and past engage in conversation. They make us laugh, puzzle us, frighten us precisely where they go off record: where they remind us that it is inevitably from the present that we’re bound to look at the past. It’s as if in these portrayals the past were mocking the present, exposing its point of view by staring right back at us.

While Rhodes Must Fall aims to rectify inaccurate representations of an imperial, racist past, the point of the new period drama is a different one. Where the former intends to remove distortions, the latter wants to “distort back”. But they have something crucial in common: they challenge and unsettle collective memory from the point of view of the present. They both propose new ways of looking at the old and — the past as we chose to see it looking back at us — old ways of looking at the new.  Both seriously engage with history in order to make a point that has always mattered — but that needs to be made again today.

Classics for the 21st Century: The Importance of Reception Studies

For those who study Classics, the question that begins many conversations in your first year of an undergraduate degree, “What do you study?”, can force a wry smile upon your face and a small urge to be almost apologetic. Elitist, inaccessible, eurocentric: these ideas spring to the mind of many people when they consider the study of classical antiquity. We may joke that Classics is thirty years behind other humanities subjects, but there is an underlying truth to this; its traditional image is not aided by the reticence among its academics to adopt new frameworks for engaging with the subject, seemingly due to a subtle “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mentality. Classics may not be broken, but that is no reason not to move with the times.

Since the Renaissance, there has been a re-awakening of interest in the classical past which has incorporated an increasing variety of approaches. One of these approaches is reception studies. Reception studies arose from the literary theory of reader response, which emphasises the individual interpretation of the reader in shaping the meaning of a literary work. Reader response theory is based on the premise that no text has an inherent meaning outside of the relationship between it and its reader, and that this relationship is affected by the reader’s personal experiences and background as well as the influences of their society. Reading a text is a creative act. Reception studies, building on this theory, has been incorporated into performance studies, historiography, and other disciplines. As it applies to Classics, it constitutes the exploration of how and why the literature, art, and ideas of the ancient Graeco-Roman world have been received, portrayed, and adapted throughout time. In the past twenty years, building on the pioneering work of the academic Charles Martindale, it has been accepted as a rigorous discipline by the classical community, and is developing into one of the major foci of current classical scholarship.

However, we should remember that while the theoretical study of classical reception may be relatively new, and so seen as a modernising force within the discipline, reception itself is not. In an Eidolon piece, Johanna Hanink wrote that “the ancient past is visibly interwoven in the fabric of the present moment”. Thus, when we contacted Maria Wyke, an Oxford alumna and now a professor of Latin and expert in classical reception studies at UCL, for her thoughts on the role of reception within Classics, she observed that “there is no Classics without Reception Studies”. Reception fundamentally underpins not only how we engage with the ancient past, but also our very ability to do so. For example, in reading Virgil’s Aeneid in Latin, when we might consider ourselves to have direct access to the author’s ‘original’ work, we are engaging with manifold acts of reception. The text itself has been passed down in different forms over centuries, and the version we use today has been put together using the ‘best guesses’ of editors where the manuscripts differ, which in themselves can be uncertain and contentious – as any Classics student will be able to tell you, pointing to the lengthy apparatus criticus of their Oxford Classical Text. And then, the translations, commentaries, and other scholarship that we use to interpret the text all form part of an extensive history of previous interpretations and schools of thought regarding Virgil’s work.

We can recognise that the Aeneid is a great work of art, but we need to also understand how it has been passed down to us, what has been emphasised and what has been omitted, and how it has been used to serve varied ideological agendas; in essence, the combination of embellishment and mutilation, expansion and retraction, that happens to any text over time. Without any awareness of its reception, we cannot so easily explain why it remains so resonant in the culture and thought of our society. We cannot step into the classical world through a vacuum.

And nor should we want to. The reception of the classical past is arguably what makes Classics so worthy of study, and forms an important part of why ancient ideas and works are still relevant to us today. Wyke also noted that “what makes Classics at all ‘special’ these days is no longer its association with elite cultures and elite education. Classics has been de-centred, is no longer ‘classic’ in that sense. But what makes it deserving of special attention (in contrast say to any study of modern languages & cultures) is precisely the long rich history of its transmission and reception, the frequency with which writers, artists, sculptors, dramatists, novelists etc. stake out their own space in culture by drawing on and often challenging classical culture”. The fact that classical ideas are present everywhere in popular culture, from the Percy Jackson novels to the poetry of Anne Carson, to the film Ben Hur, is evidence that people keep on wanting to reread and re-imagine these stories and ideas. Understanding why these ideas are still appealing to a contemporary global audience, and why they survived hundreds of years before that, is key in our approach to the ancient world.

Furthermore, neglecting to recognise the importance of reception in our engagement with Classics can carry consequences which are dangerous in more than an academic sense. Remaining unaware of how classical ideas have been received and failing to participate in the discourse of reception leaves the floor open for others to decide the interpretations of these ideas for us, and risks rendering ourselves uncritical of the ways in which such interpretations might be used. One instance of a particularly potent and troubling ideological interpretation of the classical past is the way in which 20th-century authoritarian regimes drew on classical ideas concerning race and colonialism, an example being Mussolini’s attempt to revive the glory of the Roman empire in modern Italy and his use of classical art and architecture in state propaganda. Mussolini replaced the socialist Labour day with the anniversary of the founding of Rome, on 21st April, in order to promote the Roman virtues of ‘work’ and ‘discipline’, in a clear example of the classical past being ‘cherry-picked’ for a means of promoting one particular ideology; ironically, Karl Marx himself was a classicist and wrote his PhD thesis on classical philosophy. The British empire too used classical precedent to legitimise imperialism, in particular drawing on the Roman empire as a model which had absorbed many different cultures under one political power, leading even to the idea that Britain would have to experience ‘Romanisation’ in order to reach its potential as an imperial force. In 1968, Enoch Powell, in his notoriously racist speech against mass immigration, quoted part of Sibyl’s prophecy in the Aeneid, giving the speech its commonly used name “Rivers of Blood”. 

And this ideological weaponising of Classics is not an ugly habit of the past to be neatly tucked away out of our consciousness. Donna Zuckerberg, in her book Not All Dead White Men, discusses “the fascination with ancient Stoicism” on the websites of the ‘Red Pill’ or ‘incel’ alt-right online community, in which members “use Stoicism to justify their belief that women and people of colour are not just angrier and more emotional than men, but morally inferior as well”. But we must bear in mind that we are not powerless. Classical works are not a slate clean of ideological smudges, for us to hold up and passively admire. And who would want to stare at a blank canvas anyway? We must commit ourselves to actively engaging with the past and how it has been variously interpreted, and then interpret it for ourselves. After all, as Mary Beard points out in Confronting the Classics, “Aeschylus has over the years been performed both as Nazi propaganda and to support the liberation movements in sub-Saharan Africa”. There is no one correct interpretation of a classical work, and we should not stand idly by while others push theirs to the fore. We should add our colours to the canvas.

Despite all this, reception studies remain a frustratingly small element of Oxford’s undergraduate Classics degree. Instead of merely rattling through the canonical texts, the course should emphasise equipping students with important tools for engaging with the Classics. Reception studies’ very limited inclusion in the undergraduate degree means that Classics students are missing exposure to a whole field of study which is currently transforming the way that Classics is studied and will be studied in the future. It therefore seems that we are not being adequately equipped to be at the forefront of the field upon graduation. Even though the Faculty has recognised the need for reform of its traditional emphases (there is an ongoing project to reform Mods, the first half of the course), current plans still make no mention of reception studies. It continues to be wrongly being treated as an optional extra, when in fact it ought to underpin the way we engage with Classics.

Incorporating reception into the study of Classics would diversify access to a course deeply steeped in elitism and counter some of the negative ways in which Classics is often perceived. Few state school students are given the opportunity to study classical subjects at the secondary school level, particularly Greek and Latin. Edith Hall, in her article on the teaching of Classics in secondary schools Citizens’ Classics for the 21st century, notes “the role that training in the ancient languages, as opposed to ancient ideas, plays in dividing social and economic classes”. In 2013, 1305 candidates took Latin A level, of whom 940 attended private schools, while Greek A level was taken by 260 candidates, of whom 223 were at private schools – while only 7% of the country’s students are privately educated according to a government report from 2019. State school pupils can be deterred from applying to study Classics because they feel that they would be thrown into the deep end relative to their private school peers with seven years of Latin under their belt, and perhaps with the knowledge of Greek as well.

This deep inequality has been partially addressed by the Classics faculty by dividing the course into a variety of streams based on the level of prior attainment in Latin and Greek. However, seeing inequality purely in terms of language attainment is only part of the picture; as Hall observes, exposure to ancient ideas through other means can be just as good a springboard into Classics. The Classics faculty may not have much control over the national curriculum, but highlighting the way in which the topics more familiar to sixth formers can be linked to their classical roots would be a judicious step to widen interest and accessibility. If the Classics faculty were to take reception studies seriously, it could integrate the study of classical texts and culture with an exploration of how they have been interpreted by, for example, Renaissance thinkers, or influenced Italian ‘Hercules’ cinema of the late fifties and early sixties. Then, sixth formers with little exposure to the traditional classical canon might be more inclined to consider Classics as a serious option, rather than an esoteric relic from the past.

Classics is becoming revitalised through the introduction of more critical approaches, such as critical race and gender studies. However, again the undergraduate Classics course at Oxford has been slow on the uptake of these new frameworks for engaging with the material – for example, there is currently only one paper available at Greats (the second half of the course) on sex and gender, and nothing at Mods (the first part of the course). As a result, students are having to fill the blatant gaps in the course themselves. This year, undergraduate student Andi Burton-Marsh at Balliol established the Christian Cole Society for Classicists of Colour and organised the highly successful Decolonising Classics lecture series, which has brought a refreshing new perspective for many students. There is a danger in studying Classics that we may see the prevalent traditionalism and inflexibility as inevitable by the very nature of the subject, but there is no reason why engaging with ancient material must involve out-of-date methodology. In fact, in examining material which has already been studied for thousands of years, it is even more necessary to bring a fresh approach. This is one reason why reception studies are such a valuable tool for classicists.

It is a remarkable irony that the Classics Faculty at the University of Oxford is actually a centre for reception studies globally, with its academics leading the field. Its website acknowledges “the great expansion of interest in the reception of classical culture, in which Oxford has played a significant role”. A prominent example is the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama (APGRD), a research project led by Professor Fiona Macintosh of St Hilda’s, which examines the performance of classical texts from the ancient world up to the modern-day. Its work, along with Edith Hall’s, has highlighted the significance of the performance of Greek tragedy in various post-colonial contexts – one example of an important new area of inquiry in Classics closely tied to reception studies. This project has been running for over 15 years and has become world-renowned as a research centre for classical reception studies. Why, then, is the Oxford undergraduate degree squandering the potential of the Classics faculty’s world experts in reception studies by not making engagement with classical reception its forte?

As Donna Zuckerberg readily admitted in her article ‘The Authorial Lie’, “when you study a discipline like Classics, in the eyes of the rest of the world you are constantly teetering on the edge of irrelevance”. Classicists are generally very touchy about accusations of irrelevance and will go to great lengths to refute them – but why not explore those accusations instead? Perhaps, as Zuckerberg suggests, we should stop pretending at possessing some heightened level of objective insight into the distant past. If instead, we engage with our subject through a self-confidently modern lens, using classical reception as a powerful tool to do so, it might dispel the feelings of irrelevance, and make us better classicists at the same time.

Image credit: Emma Hewlett

Comfort Films: A Good Year

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A charming British Rom-Com set in the idyllic Provence countryside, what more could you want? Sign me up, sign yourself up, sign everyone up. You might not have heard of this movie before, so I understand I may have to say a bit more than that to get everyone on board. It’s got an IMDB score of 7, and it honestly quite surprised me that people other than my family have enjoyed this movie. I’m not saying it’s bad, but I wouldn’t say it’s high quality either. Yet, there’s something very comforting about that which makes it exceedingly watchable – again, and again.

The story is simple. Max Skinner (Russell Crowe), a rude, arrogant English banker, inherits a large French country estate and vineyard from his uncle, who was his only living relative. While in Provence trying to sell his property, he reminisces on his past and falls in love with life again – and with feisty local Marion Cotillard as Fanny Chenal. There’s a wine subplot in there as well, if that interests you. Nobody is ever going to call that revolutionary writing, but it’s gently and nicely done. All the characters are, well, characters – charming caricatures of people you may already know in your life with funny deliveries and quotable one-liners. Even the name of Madam Duflot brings a smile to my face. The romance between Max and Fanny is cute and thankfully not as questionable as many other Rom-Coms made in the early 2000s; I watched Coyote Ugly again recently. Eek. A Good Year may not be revolutionary but it’s a well-made movie. 

My Dad secretly loves the film, much to the family’s delight. Whenever we tease him, he always retorts “I just like the setting!” And it’s true, one of the major highlights of the movie is the naturally gorgeous climate and views of Provence. It’s so inviting: the delicate sunrays through the grape vines, the bustling evening town squares and the dusty old chateau. Every time I watch it, I smell the sun cream and pool chlorine as I think back to holidays and summers past. I think this is what the movie does particularly well. It romanticises life; life that is simple and appreciates all the good in the world. Not of capitalism and money-makers but of the company of others. It is so simple that you can project your own experiences onto the narrative and relate to a movie you might otherwise have nothing to do with. The movie encourages you to reminisce your own life, to think back to when life was nice and full of good food – a time with human contact as well. 

I always enjoy a bit of gentle French-British rivalry, which the film celebrates. There’s a tennis match between ‘Fred Perry’ and ‘René Lacoste’ – otherwise known as Max and his groundskeeper. The soundtrack is perfect mix of French oldies and relaxing English tunes that allow a British girl like me to fit seamlessly into a foreign place. The culture clash can always squeeze a grin out me; the French roads, their confusing road signs and home cuisine certainly have caused personal funny incidents for myself. But, again, it’s nice to be reminded that we are also all the same – oh how very soppy. 

Covid-19 has certainly shaken up the world. We don’t know whether our normal lives will return, or what this ‘new’ normal might be like. However, films like A Good Year give us hope for the future. They remind us of what life was like and can be like. It reminds of what our ideals in life should be. Covid-19 may be doing that to us anyway – I really don’t care about anything other than seeing my loved ones right now – but it’s nice to have a pretty reminder that this doesn’t have to end when we get back to normal. Celebrating life’s little things can be our new normal instead. A Good Year is, for me, a feeling. Very cringy, I know, but it is. When I watch it, I feel happy and comforted. I feel reassured that everything is going to be alright. When clouds are grey it brings a smile to my face; I think you get the picture. For me, it’s the perfect feel good movie whatever the circumstances, but at the moment I welcome it more than ever.

BREAKING: Union voting error, results will be NOT declared

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The Oxford Union Returning Officer has stated that the results of today’s vote will not be given after errors occurred in the voting system meaning members were unable to vote.

In an official statement, the RO wrote, “In consultation with mi-voice, I have determined that any count will not produce a true Election Result. Thus, under Standing Order D5(f), I have referred the issue to an Election Tribunal. There shall be no declaration of results. Neither I nor any Union Official have any knowledge of the precise information regarding ballots cast.

“I also issue the following alteration: The allegations deadline for the Second Election shall be decided by the Election Tribunal called as a result of Standing Order D(f).”

It is understood that an error within the system used for online voting in the Oxford Union election has meant that some members have been unable to vote.

On Friday morning of the election, which was called after RON was victorious against the candidate for President-elect last Friday, members were sent an email which contained a link, as well as a voting number, both of which were unique to them.

However, Cherwell has since received accounts of members attempting to use the link only to be directed to a page informing them that their “Unique Voter Code…has already been used”, despite the fact that they had not yet attempted to vote.

Some members were shown the above screen when they attempted to vote with their unique link

Members who emailed the Oxford Union’s Returning Officer about the issue were directed to “lodge a support ticket with mi-vote.com technical support”. Cherwell has seen multiple replies from the voting service’s technical team which stated: “We have removed the vote previously cast and your unique voter code has been reset.”

The Union has been contacted for comment.

Image credit to US Department of State/ Wikimedia Commons.