Wednesday, May 7, 2025
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Review: The True History of the Kelly Gang

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Ned Kelly (born in 1854, died on the gallows in 1880) is the ultimate Australian anti-hero. As ubiquitous Down Under as Robin Hood is in the UK or Billy the Kid is in the States, Kelly has a vivid life story, a legendary status, and a long history of cultural representations. Justin Kurzel’s new film, The True History of the Kelly Gang, does not sit passively within the long legacy of Kelly mythology. Instead, it suggests that we’ve reached a point in the myth’s life-cycle that calls for questioning and agitation. In other words, it was the queerest, most hypermasculine depiction of Aussie folk lore I’ve ever seen.

The way that the Kelly gang use the traditional Australian ideals of “mateship” (“You’re my brother”) to both support each other and push each other to violent and angry actions is disturbing precisely because it epitomises a particular strain of virile homosociality. Tipping towards homoeroticism, aggression, and unconditional love, the film’s portrayal of masculinity is vivid and knotty. Most striking is George Mackay’s Kelly. Emphasising the boyishness of Kelly (he was only 25 years old when he was hung on the gallows), this version of Ned is wild and frenetic. 

With the way the story traces Ned’s rise, the film feels more like a bildungsroman than a folktale, complete with the difficult pangs and pains that arise from growing up in poverty and isolation in the bush. However, for all of its youthful punk iconography, my worry is that the film gnaws at something without quite knowing what it wants to do with it. I fear that maybe, rather than being intentionally directionless, the film lost a bit of direction.

There is a full battery of words that I find myself reaching for: coarse, raw, dirty, wild, rough, violent—the list goes on. These risk falling into the slightly hackneyed register of terms used for art house films; slightly too adjacent to the overused “gritty”. So instead, I will speak about the version of Kelly I held walking into the cinema, and the version of Kelly that arose before me on screen. 

In year 5 of primary school, we did a term on the Australian Gold rush of the late 19th century. We played a classroom game where you were assigned characters on the goldfields and tried to seek a fortune. In the second last week of the game, the principal of our school dressed up as a bushranger and “robbed” all our gold. We were delighted – it was one of the stand out moments of the year.

In the year of university I did in Australia, I was in an original Ned Kelly musical. It was filled with folk ballads and pub songs and the sort of baroque pathos of Les Mis. It glorified the Ned Kelly that my primary school principal also represented: traditionally masculine, true blue, and, well, a bit of a hero.

Kurzel’s film knows the crowded legacy within which it is operating. Depictions of the Kelly mythos are omnipresent in Australia, and have a long history on screen. In fact, the history of film itself is born with Kelly: the UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register lists the 1906 film The Story of the Kelly Gang, as the world’s first full-length narrative feature film. 

Like the fictionalised book by Peter Carey that the film is based on, Kurzels film chooses to sidestep the most popular and well-known elements of the Kelly myth. The famous bank robbery is one very brief component of a larger psychodrama. It eschews the idea of a good bloke Australian lumberjack with a metal helmet and a penchant for robbing banks. These ideas of Kelly all feel “safe”, simply through their repetition and folkloric quality: they are artefacts of a time that is not ours.

In contrast, The True History of the Kelly Gang, with its striking set pieces, becomes a fantasia, defying the genre of “historical film” in order to speak to our current moment. The scene of the metropolitan Australian gentry – all bedecked in elaborate dress and candlelight, watching a semi-nude Kelly bare-knuckle boxing – is electric. Mackay’s performance is nothing short of astounding, with all its boyish, scrappy, sinewy angst. And it’s here, when the film pits the tough rural life of early white Australia against the debauchery of the transplanted British governing class, that the film is at its most compelling.

This British governing class is searingly portrayed by Nicholas Hoult as Constable Fitzpatrick. He has a mild-mannered yet dangerous sort of masculinity. He draws power from being soft-spoken and civil while threatening to kill people. He sits on a lush sofa, completely naked apart from garters, smoking a cigar and conversing casually with Kelly in a 19th century rural Australian brothel. It’s this edge of sordidness, pressed into a form of mannerism and gentility, that is so interesting. He portrays an alternate form of masculinity that draws power from a dangerous edge of surety underneath the politeness and sociability.

In this, The True History of the Kelly Gang gives a more nuanced depiction of “frontier” Australia than is normally seen: it was not just mateship, lawlessness and struggling to survive, there was also a form of decadence that can only arise within the context of huge wealth disparity. Within this framing, the “punk” drive of the film gains credence. At the film’s climax, it shows four scrawny, boyish mates wearing sheer lace dresses, covered in soot and blood, and clutching guns as they fight The System. In moments like this, the film knows that it is iconic. It shows a sort of youthful, harsh masculinity, that has a tang of something almost rabid to it. 

As a result, the film feels fresh and subversive, though it does, at times, become too obvious that this subversion was the whole point. I liked what Kurzel’s film did, I like having seen it, and I like thinking about it — but I find it hard to ascertain whether or not I actually enjoyed watching it. It was tense, relentless, and hyperviolent, which is not my ideal when it comes to enjoyable film experiences. And yet, I will say that since having seen the film, I have found myself desperate to unpack its dense imagery, constantly attempting to pin down what this rich psychodrama means for contemporary Australia and how we think about our past. 

Oxford City Council promises hotel rooms to homeless amid coronavirus outbreak

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Oxford City Council has pledged additional support for rough sleepers amidst the COVID-19 outbreak.

The City Council announced on Wednesday that it intended to provide hotel rooms for up to 100 people to support those either sleeping on the street or in communal hostel spaces.

So far, 21 hotel rooms have been secured by the council for Oxford’s homeless population. In a plea to hotels and other organisations for help with accommodation demands, Councillor Linda Smith said: “Nobody should have to sleep rough in Oxford and we’re working with outreach, supported housing and day services to protect vulnerable people on our streets and in supported housing from the coronavirus.”

A further 60 beds are being urgently sought through a range of options to provide self-contained accommodation for the entirety of Oxford’s homeless population.

These new measures follow Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s announcement of a nation-wide lockdown in order to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Last week the Communities Secretary announced a £3.2 million emergency fund to assist Britain’s rough sleepers to self-isolate and protect them from the spread of coronavirus. Oxford City Council has secured up to £32,250 from the government’s nationwide fund to cover the cost of supporting Oxford City’s homeless population.

Support includes self-contained accommodation, a measure which came into force over the weekend when the Council activated severe weather emergency protocol (SWEP) to open emergency beds for rough sleepers following the Met Office’s forecast of sub-zero temperatures.

The City Council have stated their intention to move from communal shelter schemes, such as the Floyd’s Row Centre which partially opened earlier this year, to self-contained spaces to accommodate homeless people currently sleeping on the streets or in shared accommodation.

As part of these measures, Oxford Street Population Outreach Team (OxSPOT) has closed its assessment service in Bonn Square to allow for a stronger outreach presence on the streets, providing rough sleepers with information on the symptoms of COVID-19 and advice of steps to take if individuals believe they have the virus.

The City Council have further announced that they will be working with The Porch day centre to provide daytime support for rough sleepers in self-contained accommodation. In line with the government’s social distancing measures, these day services are planned to include a mobile service to deliver meals and essential supplies for rough sleepers.

The symbiosis of high and pop culture

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Engrained in the very notion of ‘popular culture’ is an implication that it is a base derivative of ‘high culture’ – but does this opinion remain valid, or, important, in contemporary society?

The early 21st Century has seen the popularisation of dance dramas, with exemplars including the Step Up (2006) American movie series and BBC Film’s release of StreetDance 3D in 2010, offering storylines centred around the physical space where students attending prestigious ballet schools interact with those of the same generation whose dancing was cultivated in the alleyways of deprived suburban districts. In both films, it is not merely the street dancers who must conform to the disciplines of ballet, but the ballet dancers must also accommodate the contrasting rhythms of Hip-Hop music.

During his headlining act at Glastonbury last year, Stormzy devoted approximately two minutes of his set to a pair of impeccable ballet dancers. In the backdrop was a projection of statements highlighting the significant development in the industry: ballet shoes are now made to match different skin tones. It celebrated the ballet world for its progression. It is a world which is, no matter how slowly, gradually moving away from the exclusivity so resonant of ‘high’ culture. In all of these aforementioned instances, ‘popular’ culture and ‘high’ culture are explored through their amalgamation rather than their dichotomy.

Equally, musicians are increasingly experimenting with the distinction between ‘popular’ and ‘high’ culture. In 2017, music composer Tokio Myers gained critically acclaimed fame when he won Britain’s Got Talent. He stunned both the judges and audience from his very first audition through his captivating rendition of Claude Debussy’s “Clair de Lune” which was followed by a piano and dubstep composition of Ed Sheeran’s “Bloodstream”. Interestingly, the composition did not elevate to a climax culminating in Debussy’s piece, but rather, Debussy’s piece was used to introduce the familiarity of one of Britain’s most famous pop music icons. This is not to suppose that Tokio Myers presented the French composer’s piece as inferior, but that he actively acknowledged how music from classical (‘high’) genres, could be complimented by music from pop (‘popular’) genres. Tokio Myers put Claude Debussy and Ed Sheeran on one stage, in one piece.

However, it is not just different genres which interact: popular music is also engrossed in the subject matter associated with high culture. In the same year as Tokio Myers’ debut, award-winning, Grime artist Dave appropriated BBC’s live studio debate Question Time and used it as the title for his politically driven single released in 2017. Within the single, Dave imitates the discourse characteristic of the BBC political debates, opening with the refrain “A question for the new Prime Minister”. In approximately seven minutes, Dave questions the opposing political leaders, the crippled NHS, and the response to Grenfell. Dave inherits a political register, taking it from the formality of a BBC televised debate to the accessible platform of Spotify which, in turn, ignited a whirlwind of responses through inspired listeners’ Twitter threads. Indeed, the content conventional to mediums of high culture are now increasingly informed by their discussion in more accessible forums – a discussion which a large proportion of the general public are now invited to participate in, rather than being shunned for a lack of understanding.

In terms of literature, we have seen how a modern and popular adaptation of classical mythology can bring an author global success. Typically, the subjects of Classics, Latin and Greek do not make much of an appearance on the comprehensive state school syllabus, but Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson series and JK Rowling’s Harry Potter franchise means that children are given the opportunity to experience the riveting tales of Classical periods through other forms.

In no way am I suggesting the distinction between ‘popular’ and ‘high’ culture no longer exists, but what I do intend to show, is that the notion of popular culture as a base derivative seems outdated and reductive. You can look to any medium of art and see how the popular holds great influence over the high. Its platforms mean that art forms and subject matter which were once confined to the exclusive bracketing of high culture are now increasingly accessible. The relationship between the two cultures is less hierarchical and more symbiotic. One thing is for sure, the high aspect of culture is no longer so out of reach.

I’m watching ‘YOU’

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When its second series aired in December 2019, the Netflix hit YOU managed to take trashy TV to new levels. Complete with sex, violence, dubious acting, it’s guaranteed to fulfil your very wildest binge-watching dreams. However, public reception of the show has highlighted a cultural issue that transcends its frivolous content: why is it that our society romanticises dangerous misogynists as legitimate love interests?

For those who haven’t experienced the compulsive pleasure of watching the show yet, here’s a quick summary. Joe Goldberg is a serial stalker, a seemingly ordinary man who falls obsessively in love with his female victims and then proceeds to do absolutely anything to have and keep them. In the first series his muse is a vapid poetry student named Beck who he murders in the final episode, before moving on to the unfortunately named Love in series two, while he is simultaneously pursued by a vengeful girlfriend from his past who he buried alive in the woods after she attempted to leave him. Joe Goldberg is, in short, a monster.

But on social media something strange started to happen. Many people began professing their attraction to Joe. In some cases, the tone was jovial, “kidnap me pls x”, wrote one viewer in reference to the show’s main character. However, other messages seemed disturbingly genuine, with another tweeting, “Said this already but @PennBadgley is breaking my heart once again as Joe. What is it about him?”.

Penn Badgley, who plays Joe, has recognised and engaged with this unnerving phenomenon extensively since the show came to prominence. Badgley is keen to remind these viewers (predominantly young women) that Joe is – news-flash – a lying, stalking, murdering creep who hides women’s underwear and the teeth of their ex-boyfriends in cubby holes around his apartment. Perturbed by the audience response to his character, Badgley commented, “He’s not actually a person who needs somebody who loves him. He’s a murderer. He’s a sociopath. He’s abusive. He’s delusional. And he’s self-obsessed.”   

Joe may be a particularly striking example of our romanticization of the troubled and abusive protagonist, but what is more disturbing is the subtler romanticization of problematic characters that we tend to take for granted when we consume fiction.

A few years ago, it was Twilight’s Edward Cullen that had young people wishing they too had a murderous 120-year-old boyfriend who would break into their home in the middle of the night and gaze furiously at them while they slept. Emotionally and, at times on the precipice of being physically abusive, Edward Cullen is a prime example of how coercive control is veiled as admirable protectiveness. What made matters worse is that the author of the series, Stephanie Meyer, wasn’t trying to produce a thought-provoking antihero. On the contrary, she was aiming to create a commercially desirable romantic lead, playing into the mindset of yet another generation of girls who associated male dominion with true love. No wonder that it was only after the books rose to fame that Meyer recognised, “I think there are many feminists who would say that I am not a feminist”.

And the trope not exclusive to, nor even more popular within, modern popular culture. The orthodox literary canon is rife with abusive yet romantically desirable men, perhaps nowhere more so than in gothic literature. Take, for example, the heroes written by the Brontë sisters. Charlotte Brontë’s Mr Rochester is the type of guy who thinks it’s morally justified to lock up a female love interest in a confined space if and when he deems her out of her right mind: the only difference between him and YOU’s Joe Goldberg, is that Joe chooses a soundproof glass box rather than an attic as his prison. Often described as a proto-feminist work, readers have long been baffled by Jane Eyre’s ending, which sees Jane marry the ghastly individual who dehumanised his last wife for so many years.

And the problem doesn’t just lie in the literature itself. Subsequent adaptations of Jane Eyre, and indeed of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, tend to cast Mr Rochester and Heathcliff respectively as conventionally attractive, relatively young men, whose problematic behaviour is often acted more like troubled angst than abuse. The way in which these texts are retold needs to change radically in order to break the dangerous cycle of romanticising the abuser.

Another important question to ask is whether the idolisation of abusive love interests applies to male characters alone. Recently, Phoebe Waller Bridge’s ingenious Killing Eve came to our screens, and along with it, came the demand for a radical reassessment of female love interests and the ethics of attraction in fiction. Villanelle is a psychopathic murderess for hire, over whom the other main character, Eve Polastri, develops an intellectual obsession that quickly takes on a personal and sexual dimension. Swathes of viewers, like those of YOU, have confessed to the strange attraction they feel towards the Villanelle and a fascination about her relationship with Eve.

The difference, however, between Villanelle and comparable male abusers, is that Villanelle could never be confused for a hero: as her name suggests, she is a villain through and through, and thus her abuse and cruelty are never veiled in the guise of protectiveness or extreme compassion. Moreover, when people describe their attraction for a character like Villanelle, the language used is not that of romanticization but fetishization. As hard as Waller-Bridge tried to avoid writing a series that panders to the male gaze, the predominant attitude of male viewers appears to be one of prurient fascination in the abnormality of Villanelle’s sexuality as a departure from the traditional female love interest. Unlike Joe Goldberg, Edward Cullen and Mr Rochester, Villanelle is the antithesis of the norms we associate with her gender in the relationship dynamic.

YOU, for all its triviality, sheds light on what we consider acceptable behaviour by male characters in fiction. By taking common abusive tropes to their extreme, the show may ultimately serve a beneficial social purpose: teaching us to question why, time and time again, we tend to find abusive behaviour by men not only normal but attractive.

(Non)Traditional Casting

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When you imagine an eccentric Dickens character or an armored knight of Arthurian legend, you probably don’t picture an ethnically Indian man. Dev Patel proves that you probably should. On theater screens now, Patel shines as the titular character in The Personal History of David Copperfield, based on the classic by Charles Dickens. He also wields a sword with utter ease in the first trailer for The Green Knight, David Lowery’s adaptation of a popular Arthurian poem where Patel stars as Sir Gawain. By casting Patel as classic British literary characters, both adaptations have enlivened debates about the merits and perils of nontraditional casting. But how “nontraditional” is Dev Patel’s casting, really?  

Within a preliminary conception of “nontraditional,” Patel’s casting as David Copperfield and Sir Gawain certainly qualifies. Often referred to (problematically) as “color-blind casting,” nontraditional casting involves employing an actor irrespective of their ethnicity, skin color, or gender. Distinguished from whitewashing, nontraditional casting typically refers to instances where actors of color are chosen for roles initially imagined for white actors. Even beyond the choice of Dev Patel, The Personal History of David Copperfield is a great contemporary example. Many major supporting characters are also cast nontraditionally, like Benedict Wong as Mr. Wickfield and Nikki Amuka-Bird as Mrs. Steerforth. And the film demonstrates just how successful this casting method can be – the delightful ensemble’s infectious humor and chemistry earned the film a BAFTA nomination for Best Cast. 

Consequently, Dev Patel’s disruption of the typical, all-white ensembles of British period pieces can be viewed as thrillingly progressive. And if The Green Knight is anywhere as good as The Personal History of David Copperfield, the success of that nontraditional choice opens work opportunities for other actors of color within film adaptations of classics, in the same way those roles have been opened on the theatre stage (take, for example, Ruth Negga as Hamlet or the entire cast of Broadway sensation, Hamilton). 

However, a closer look at the Dev Patel example in particular disrupts the simplicity of this traditional versus nontraditional binary. After all, the imagined whiteness of both David Copperfield and Sir Gawain stems from these characters’ Britishness. And Dev Patel is British. 

Contrary to a filmography that largely casts him as a character born in India (Slumdog Millionaire, two Best Exotic Marigold Hotels, Hotel Mubai) and thrust into white spaces (The Man Who Knew Infinity, Lion), Dev Patel was born and educated in a London borough. He first visited India to film Slumdog Millionaire, and often speaks about how he uses his projects in India to help him better understand his own heritage and identity. So while his casting as David Copperfield and Sir Gawain causes furor due to his Indian ethnicity, his unimpeachable Britishness conversely makes him the target of criticism whenever he is cast in a role intended for an Indian-born actor. 

In one interview, Patel expressed his frustration with such critics, saying, “I get flak sometimes because people will say, ‘Why aren’t they giving these roles to a real Indian?’ I wonder, what does that even mean? The only way I can converse with my grandparents is in Gujarati. Does that make me real enough? Or am I only allowed to witness the moments of prejudice and racism going through airports? Is that the only bit that I’m allowed of the culture?” 

Turning that question towards the other side of Patel’s identity, what bit of British culture is Patel allowed? Does being born and raised in London make him “real” enough to play British characters? 

To conclusively define Patel’s David Copperfield and Sir Gawain as “nontraditional” seems to imply that the characters’ whiteness supersedes their Britishness. That implication feels like a disservice to both works. Much of Dickens’ writing is grounded in a critique of wealth inequality and classicism within British society. And while his work has universal appeal, it is also uniquely, contextually resonant. Additionally, the Arthurian legends are right up alongside Charles Dickens, Harry Potter, and the Queen’s corgis as aggressively British cultural exports. David Copperfield and Sir Gawain are thus undeniably British characters, played by a British actor. In that light, Dav Patel’s casting is about as traditional as it gets. 

Of course, casting is not so simple. Film is a visual medium. A seeing audience will always note an actor’s skin color and ethnic background – which is why the Actors’ Equity Association resists the term “color-blind” casting. Consequently, Dev Patel is trapped within the current traditional versus nontraditional casting paradigm. To some, he’s too British for Indian roles. To others, he’s too Indian for British roles. It’s the age-old dilemma of second-generation immigrants – a suitably oxymoronic description for an often-oxymoronic experience that I (a Syrian-American) and others share. 

So rather than be caught in a simplistic debate between the merits of traditional or nontraditional casting, Dev Patel invites us to engage in a more wholesale reimagining of casting in film. Maybe instead of overvaluing skin color and thus uplifting a singular, ethnic identity as “British,” film casting should actually represent the diversity of ethnicities, cultures, and identities in modern British society. After all, if teachers ask students to celebrate these classics as part of British culture, British children should be represented in their visual adaptations – regardless of their ethnic background. As Patel says of Copperfield, “I’m from North West London, and the idea that we’ve spun a version of this film that allows kids from there to find a face they can relate to is really exciting.” So while Dev Patel’s casting is considered nontraditional now, maybe it shouldn’t be. 

Besides being great films, The Personal History of David Copperfield and The Green Knight have an additional opportunity to serve as sites to explore, debate, and discuss belonging, othering, and the place of second-generation immigrants. Film harnesses the fullest extent of its political and historical power as a medium when it can foster these debates, learn from them, and ultimately better represent the audiences on the other side of the screen. To this end, The Personal History of David Copperfield is a resounding success. And The Green Knight is also another step in the right direction. All hail, Dev Patel. 

Review: Four Tet’s ‘Sixteen Oceans’

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Few genres of music (jazz excluded, perhaps) are more able to capture the intricacy of human movement and physicality than dance music. The opening tracks of Four Tet’s latest album do just that, reminding us why the UK producer has become such a celebrated live act. On ‘School’, Kieran Hebden masterfully constructs melodies that extend, protract, reach out like limbs before collapsing back in on themselves, while ‘Baby’ is sensual and intimate, a chopped vocal sample (courtesy of who else but, er, Ellie Goulding) laid naked over a fragmented beat. Yet these indubitable dance bangers also have a certain naivety, evident as ‘Baby’ breaks down into a naturalistic idyll of tentative synth and birdsong. The simplicity of one’s surroundings is a recurrent point of reference for Kieran’s new material.

Sixteen Oceans is the latest in a steady stream of album releases from Four Tet. While perhaps not worthy of the label ‘prolific’, Kieran has maintained an astounding level of consistency over 20+ years as a musician, his work equally experimental and emotionally resonant enough for him to have become a household name amongst critics and ravers alike. Sixteen Oceans is both virtuosic and breathtakingly simple, offering a timely musing on youth, nature, and growth; here, each of the sixteen tracks is an ocean, something for the listener to traverse, to contemplate, to immerse themselves in.

The pace slows on the next pair of tracks. The titles of ‘Teenage Birdsong’ and ‘Romantics’ both evoke the purity and innocence of youth, and the music has a dreamy, stripped-back quality, largely thanks to Kieran’s penchant for acoustic instrumentation. ‘Teenage Birdsong’ pairs a rolling breakbeat with a panpipe solo before fading out in a drowsy rallentando. ‘Romantics’ is lullaby-esque: washed-out synth, bubble-gum vocals, and plucked strings mingle with the unmistakable chimes of a musical box. Kieran’s approach here is deliberately simplistic; the tape-loop beat could easily have been lifted straight from Portishead’s Dummy.

Yet this dreamy style of arrangement is far less effective on ‘Love Salad’, which seems to sink too far into the ambience. Different melodies and layers do emerge from the track’s muffled, submerged beat over its 7-minute duration, but all too quickly they cower away and withdraw again. It’s a ponderous track, at times more like an iPhone alarm tone than any striking form of dance music. Something resembling a payoff does eventually arrive, but ‘Love Salad’ (as with some of Sixteen Oceans’ other more reserved moments) lacks the sort of visceral attack seen in the work of emerging UK producers such as Loraine James and Kelly Lee Owens.

Fortunately, ‘Insect Near Piha Beach’ offers an upshift in tempo, clicking into gear with a more rave-oriented beat and decisive arrangement. Jagged hi-hats underpin breathy vocal samples and a repeated raga motif which shimmers before dissipating into kaleidoscopic fragments. The track’s more hallucinatory qualities provide one of the most ecstatic moments on the album. Listening, you can imagine yourself stumbling out of a beachside party, hand in hand with a loved one. The sun rises over the water. The endorphins flow.

‘Something in the Sadness’ is a slower burn but sustains the emotional momentum of the previous track. Twinkling, winking synth pads fuse with stabs that have all the texture of a bowed cello string: only the thudding bass drum keeps the whole track from falling apart. Careful layering of sounds here gives a greater sense of contemplation and introspection, which also comes across on several of the ‘interlude’ tracks that appear throughout Sixteen Oceans. While some of these are fairly nondescript and contribute little to the flow of the album, instrumentals such as ‘ISTM’ are beautifully fragile; here, the birdsong motif returns, intersected by moody piano. ‘Bubbles at Overlook 25th March 2019’ feels meaningful too, with Kieran observing the ephemerality of his surroundings. We hear the bubbles swell into life and burst almost immediately, their existence necessarily fleeting.

Sixteen Oceans takes us back to nature, reminding us of a simpler state of being. We’re repeatedly transported by recordings of birds chirping or of leaves rustling underfoot; ‘4T Recordings’ gives the impression of spectating the dawn chorus from behind a wall of glass. Four Tet draws us out of the chaos and anxiety of our minds, giving us a brief, soothing moment of serenity which is all the more precious given the current state of isolation so many of us find ourselves in, stuck inside and left to battle with our own thoughts as we are. Kieran himself communicates through his Instagram that “it’s a relief…that I released an album at this time that I made to have a peaceful mood. Music helps me cope with everything.”

The final track on the album is perhaps the best, ‘Mama Teaches Sanskrit’ being a tribute to a 5000-year-old language and to Kieran’s Indian family heritage – something of a sister track to ‘Ba Teaches Yoga’ on 2013’s Beautiful Rewind. The resonating synths again seem childlike: sensitive, curious, eager. The mother’s voice enters, warm and lyrical, followed by an infant’s sing-song imitations. It’s an interaction which symbolises the purity of childhood, of a fresh, inquisitive mind starting to learn from its environment – perhaps the time where a human life comes closest to emulating the simplicity of nature. Four Tet has become a master of capturing such moments. At times, this is an album which seems to speak the language of human existence itself.

Remote Teaching Is No Good Quick Fix

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With every new email from vice and pro-vice chancellors, it looks like Oxford is planning to provide undergraduates with Trinity Term’s full workload and exams, but remotely. While the logistics of how this would work thus far remain undecided, the University’s final decision will face many challenges.

The coronavirus outbreak will inevitably affect the physical health of students.  A significant percentage are likely to contract the illness, forcing many students to miss multiple exams or assignments, and that’s far from the worst-case scenario. Remote learning may also negatively affect the mental wellbeing of many students. The typical full workload will likely still be demanded but without any of the welfare programmes which Oxford offers, or the social life which can make the workload tolerable. Furthermore, remote examinations rely on every student having access to a computer with an internet connection, in a silent room. This is, of course, impossible for many students.

In my view, Oxford has two options. The first: cancelling Trinity entirely and continuing from where we left off in Michaelmas 2020. Exams could be taken during Michaelmas rather than Trinity in the future, with the academic year beginning in January rather than October. This would have the positive future effect of allowing Oxford to interview and to make offers after A-Level results are announced in August, rather than making conditional offers in January. Conditional offers are currently based upon unreliable predicted grades, meaning the University must estimate how many students will miss their grades.

Option 1 would also provide finalists with more time to revise ( they would be able to study during the long summer vacation rather than the Easter vacation) and allow all those with end-of-year exams the opportunity to enjoy sunny Trinity term with slightly less stress. This change would, however, need be carried out in conjunction with other British universities in addition to UCAS, in order to bring timings in sync. Despite this, such a change would make sense in the long-run and the current outbreak is a great opportunity to switch from the old calendar to the new.

It may be overly optimistic to assume that university will be able to resume in time for Michaelmas. An Imperial College study suggests that the outbreak may continue for up to eighteen months, with a second wave of the virus possible in the winter. If this outbreak follows the expected trend, the economy will all but shut down, and there will not be much of a jobs market waiting for finalists.

The issues with remote teaching will only be perpetuated over time. As such, it may be sensible for the University to go for option 2: something similar to a group rustication, where studies are suspended for a year and then Trinity 2021 picks up from where Hilary Term 2020 left off. Group rustication would be the default option, with students perhaps choosing to opt-out due to a good reason, based upon the likelihood of the pandemic continuing. This option may be difficult to decide upon now, but Oxford choosing option 2 would certainly set a good precedent for other universities to do the same, and it may be necessary given the projected span of coronavirus. Either way, both of the above options are better than the remote teaching and examining which is currently planned. The University should at least consider them, even if they may seem inconvenient in the short term.

Review: Emma.

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With Little Women and David Copperfield playing on screens, and The Secret Garden coming up in April, Emma. is one in a remarkable string of adaptations of much-loved, as much-adapted, literary classics in the current cinema season. Director Autumn de Wilde’s first feature film, starring Anya Taylor-Joy, is based on Jane Austen’s well-known story of a smart and wealthy young woman who fights the boredom of country life by matchmaking (sometimes successfully, but mostly not), until she learns to be less intrusive, and finally finds love herself in her long-term friend and mentor George I-told-you-so Knightley. 

While Emma. might not be as emotionally disputed as Pride and Prejudice (the allegedly upcoming new TV version of which is certain to inflame the eternal who-is-the-best-Darcy-of-all-times-battle), it is nevertheless revered as the last of her novels Austen herself saw published, and already the subject of a row of film adaptations (including the 1995 Beverly Hills version Clueless, two 1996 films starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Kate Beckinsale, and a 2009 BBC miniseries with Romola Garai). Thus, Emma. entails the mixture of risk and appeal that appertains to every classic when it comes to (re)adaptation: any new version is in danger of vexing passionate fans, inevitably compared with predecessors, and expected to justify its existence by providing ‘a new angle’ for a story often-told. 

On the other hand, classics are thought to be infinitely reinterpretable, and the load of public expectations may be just the prickling challenge a director is looking for – whether in hope to satisfy them or to frustrate them with relish. Autumn de Wilde’s adaptation, however, appears to want to cut off any such discussions from the outset – ‘This is the new Emma. Take it or leave it!’, is what the bold full stop in the title seems to say. But what does this new Emma. offer?

In short: some pretty, well-composed pictures and a good deal of slapstick. The new adaptation bears the overall pastel look of a cream cake, punctuated by a glowing yellow dress here and a crimson red coat there. It is nice to look at the often conspicuously symmetrical shots in which not a single well-trimmed curl, not a cherry on a cupcake, and not a flower in a vase is out of place. As well arranged as the rooms of Hartfield, Randalls and Donwell are the characters’ movements within them: often symmetrical, always visibly choreographed, like the steps of the footmen that obediently carry around screens to shield Mr Woodhouse, Emma’s always worried father (Bill Nighy), and all of his beloved against draught – of which Mr. Woodhouse is obsessively afraid, thus providing the film’s running gag.

Emma. is a decidedly comic adaptation, over the top, and ready to surprise: in his first appearance we see Mr. Knightley (Johnny Flynn) strip and present his naked backside; in a parallel scene, Emma irritably gathers up her dress to warm her bare bum at the fireside. Every instance of earnest, intimacy or passion is subverted and ridiculed. To give an example: Austen’s novel includes a scene in which Emma holds her baby niece, placating Knightley, cross with her as always on account of some misbehaviour, by the view of this domestic idyll. In Autumn de Wilde’s adaptation, Emma awkwardly holds a toddler in her arms that is clearly too big to be so cradled. When Knightley sits next to her and they both look at the child, so far so iconic, the child burps – and is taken away by a hysterical mother screaming for the nanny, while Emma and Mr. Knightley burst out laughing. Similarly, the romantic denouement at the end of the film (“I cannot make speeches, Emma…”) is disrupted by a nosebleed. In these (and other) instances, the film crosses the line to parody.

Bill Nighy as Mr. Woodhouse, Emma’s father.

Alright, so Emma. is a more slapstick-y adaption, with a little unexpected nudity – what of it! After all, Austen’s novel is satirical, imbued with sharp irony. So where is the problem? There is none, perhaps: one can go watch the film that, taken for itself, is entertaining enough and perfectly enjoyable. As an adaptation of Austen’s novel, however, Emma. falls short. I do not mean to bring forward highly problematic and scarcely helpful terms like ‘fidelity’ of an adaptation towards the original. But in comparison to Austen’s novel, Emma. fails at quite a fundamental task: interesting the audience in Emma’s development. 

Emma is known to be one of the least likeable, least accessible of Austen’s protagonists: she is clever and caring, yes, but also snobby, conceited, spoilt, and incidentally outright mean. She is not as charmingly witty as Elizabeth Bennet or as considerate as Elinor Dashwood. The current adaptation has been praised – and rightfully so – for bringing out a meaner, edgier Emma, less charming than in previous adaptations, but more in line with Austen’s heroine. In Austen’s novel, however, a complex narrative structure allows readers to see Emma’s flaws and errors, but also to engage with her and to see the world through her eyes. Emma may not be excessively amiable in the beginning, but that will, thanks to Austen’s skilful guidance, not prevent readers from identifying with her and developing an interest in her realising her misjudgements and ultimately finding happiness.

Crucial to the unfolding of  this structure is the character of Mr. Knightley, who acts as Emma’s corrective, sincerely interested in her moral improvement, while still devoted to her. Unfortunately, the Mr. Knightley of the 2020 adaptation, with his ill-cut whiskers and shaggy sex-appeal, is totally unconvincing as the voice of reason. He still rebukes Emma, but, apparently, merely for the thrill of it. A new interpretation of the somewhat paternalistic love interest Knightley, a friend of Emma’s father, seventeen years her senior, and constantly lecturing her? Yes, please! But not simply by making Knightley look younger, and reducing the slow-grown and multi-faceted affection between Emma and Knightley to mere sexual tension (all too obviously showcased at the Highbury ball scene following the famous “With whom will you dance? – With you, if you’ll ask me.”).

The lack of a convincing Mr. Knightley is one reason why, watching Emma., one may end up, as I did, just not caring whether Emma learns her lessons and is enabled to meet Knightley on equal terms – something that is almost impossible in reading the novel, I would claim, and that takes away the momentum of the story. But primarily, this is the effect of the screwball comedy, the reduction of characters to caricatures, and the repeated undermining of sincere communication and moments of emotional depth. All that creates a distance between audience and characters, preventing real engagement with the latter and concern for their lot. In spite of all the scenes putting their bodies on the spot (the stripping, the bleeding), the characters do not appear as people of flesh and blood. Emma. the film simply does not take Emma the novel seriously enough for that.

So in the end, the film left me with the stale aftertaste of an opportunity not seized: I would have liked to see an ‘edgy’ Emma undergoing a credible change, in a less caricatural setting, at the side of a not so one-dimensional Knightley. As it is, I can’t help but find that Emma. resembles the pastel cupcakes served in it: pretty to look at, but ultimately not very substantial.

Comfort Reading in the Time of Covid-19

  1. David Nicholls 

If rom-coms are the most comforting type of movie, then David Nicholls writes the most comforting type of novel. He is best known for One Day, a moving but also funny and warm novel on friendship, love and the passing of time. Starter for Ten, about an awkward first-year trying to get onto University Challenge, and Us, which follows a family on a tour of the great art of Europe, are equally relaxing and heart-warming to read. Incidentally, Nicholls also has an incredibly gentle and soothing voice, so if you spot a podcast with him make sure to give it a listen. 

  1. Louisa May Alcott 

Little Women was the first classic I ever read and, as a 10-year-old, I thought it was mind-numbingly boring. So, I started reading it whenever I couldn’t sleep and gradually over the years, after rereading it many times, it has become the most comforting book imaginable to me. The warmth of the family, the relationships between the sisters and their kindness towards others in the community bring me so much joy. It is the most worn book on my bookshelf and, ten years later, definitely not a boring read anymore!

  1. Roald Dahl 

Roald Dahl was my childhood hero – I can still recite passages of Fantastic Mr. Fox and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory from memory. His worlds are so beautifully fantastical that reading these books now has to be one of the easiest ways to return to the imagination and wonder of being a child. I actually decided this week to read one of Dahl’s books of short stories for adults, Kiss Kiss. They are significantly more macabre and sexual than the books of my childhood but at their core they are just as surprising, extraordinary and funny. What could be more comforting now than reading short stories about a man who turns into a bee and a celibate vicar who gets eaten by a woman?

  1. Elizabeth Strout 

Whilst Roald Dahl is comforting to read because his books take us far away from reality, Elizabeth Strout is comforting to read precisely because she writes so well about reality. She is best known for Olive Kitteridge and My Name is Lucy Barton and I am yet to find someone who hasn’t fallen absolutely in love with these books after reading them. The prose is deceivingly simple and easy to read but gives such a profound insight into the relationships within communities and families, two groups which have suddenly become significantly more important. 

  1. William Boyd 

William Boyd is the master of the immersive story. His books often chronicle one character through every stage of their life, capturing them so skilfully that they begin to feel uncannily real. I read Sweet Caress when I was 16 but I can still visualise every stage of Amory Clay’s life, from her relationships in 1920s Berlin to her career as a photographer in the Second World War, as if it had been told to me by a friend. Any Human Heart is equally absorbing, written as the journals of a writer and his experiences of the events of the twentieth century – he even meets Virginia Woolf, Evelyn Waugh and James Joyce. The filmic dreaminess of Love is Blind also makes it the perfect book to curl up in bed with for a day. 


Is there a book which is particularly important to you? A new discovery or an old favourite which inspires or uplifts? We want to hear about it! Send in pitches (the more personal the better) to [email protected] and [email protected] to be featured on our brand new weekly ‘Friday Favourite’ article.

Government funds three Oxford COVID-19 projects

Three University of Oxford research projects will receive shares of a £20million government investment to combat coronavirus. Six UK projects will benefit from this research funding, announced by Business Secretary Alok Sharma on Monday.

The three projects include work to develop an effective vaccine, to manufacture a vaccine at a million-dose scale, and to test drugs which may help treat confirmed COVID-19 patients.

A research team led by Prof Sarah Gilbert, developing a new vaccine to protect against COVID-19, will receive £2.2million. The funding will support pre-clinical testing of the new vaccine, new manufacturing, and clinical trials in humans. The team have developed a vaccine, made from an adenovirus, and is planning to begin testing on adults aged 18-50 next month.

Dr Sandy Douglas’ research term, aiming to develop processes to manufacture vaccines at a million dose scale, will receive £0.4million. This means, if clinical trials of a vaccine are successful, the vaccine can reach high-risk groups as quickly as possible.

Prof Peter Horby’s research team, testing whether existing or new drugs can help patients hospitalised with confirmed COVID-19, will receive £2.1million. The team aims to have data available to inform patient treatment in 3 months. The trial will first test two HIV drugs.

An Edinburgh University project receiving £4.9million in funding will collect samples and data from COVID-19 patients to help control the outbreak and provide treatment. An Imperial College London team aims to develop antibodies to target the novel coronavirus, which may help to find a potential therapy. A Queens University Belfast project will test drugs on cells to investigate how toxic effects of coronavirus can be reduced.

The £20million is funded by the Department of Health and Social Care through the National Institute for Health Research and by UK Research and Innovation. This follows the government’s funding of £30million to the National Institute for Health Research for research into COVID-19 and £10million to increase Public Health England’s capacity to test people and monitor the virus.

Business Secretary Alok Sharma said: “Whether testing new drugs or examining how to repurpose existing ones, UK scientists and researchers have been working tirelessly on the development of treatments for coronavirus. The projects we are funding today will be vital in our work to support our valuable NHS and protect people’s lives.”

Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance said: “The UK is home to incredible scientists and researchers who are all at the forefront of their field, and all united in their aim; protecting people’s lives from coronavirus. The announcement made today reflects the vital work being undertaken by our scientists to help develop vaccines and treatments. This research could herald important breakthroughs that will put the NHS in a stronger position to respond to the outbreak.”

Chief Medical Officer Professor Chris Whitty said: “The world faces an unprecedented challenge in our efforts to tackle the spread of COVID-19 and it is vital we harness our research capabilities to the fullest extent to limit the outbreak and protect life. Alongside the world-leading research overseen by the NIHR, these new 6 projects will allow us to boost our existing knowledge and test new and innovative ways to understand and treat the disease.”

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “In the midst of a global health emergency the UK is using all its extensive research expertise to quickly develop new vaccines to target this international threat. This investment will speed up globally-recognised vaccine development capabilities and help us find a new defence against this disease.”

Image: Ellie Wilkins