Thursday 17th July 2025
Blog Page 598

Staff-student relationships: Brasenose community warned of risks

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The community of Brasenose College has been warned about the dangers of intimate relationships between staff and students.

The College has sent out an email advising staff not to enter into personal relationships with any student for whom they have responsibility.

Principal John Bowers informed the College of an update to the preamble of the Academic Staff Student Relationship Policy. While the policy itself remains unchanged, the new preamble explains the principles behind the policy.

Within the policy, the College identifies the professional relationship between members of staff and students as being central to the student’s education development and wellbeing.

Conversely, a close personal or intimate relationship with a student “often involves difficulties rooted in the inequalities of power as well as problems in maintaining the boundaries of professional and personal life.”

The policy, which applies to academic staff and students of Brasenose, also requires that any personal relationship must be declared at once to the Senior Tutor.

The principal highlighted that “however brief” the relationship, “there are significant risks in any close personal or intimate relationships between individuals who occupy inherently unequal positions.”

Oxford to receive £150 million donation from former chair of Trump strategy forum

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US billionaire Stephen Schwarzman has pledged a donation of £150 million to fund humanities research and to tackle ”looming social issues” linked to artificial intelligence.

He is the founder and chief executive of Blackstone financial group and has a personal wealth of $12 billion.

Schwarzman previously served as chair of President Trump’s strategic and policy forum before dissolution barely six months after its inception. He describes himself as having a “good relationship” with Trump, saying that he has got on well with the last three presidents in office.

The gift will be used to create the Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. The aim of this is to bring together disciplines including English, philosophy, music and history in a single hub with performing spaces and a library, which will collaborate with a new Institute for Ethics in AI.

Schwarzman was approached by Vice-Chancellor Louise Richardson about the project 18 months ago on the site of the former Radcliffe Infirmary. She is reported to have expressed surprise when the American businessman proposed more ambitious plans than those initially discussed, creating what she referred to as a “unique humanities hub.”

Richardson said: “It’s really important to me that this gift is a real endorsement and a vote of confidence in the humanities. Stem [science, technology, engineering and maths] has been getting all the attention lately – there’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s great to be reminded how critical the humanities are too.”

She defended the amount Schwarzman has pledged, saying: “We operate in a global marketplace. While in UK terms we’re quite a wealthy institution, when you compare us to the US – Harvard’s endowment of $40bn (£32bn), Yale, Stanford, Princeton and so on – their endowments are many times the size of ours and these are the people we are competing with for staff, for students, for research funding, so we really have to up our game in philanthropy for us to compete successfully.”

Oxford’s existing central endowment currently stands at around £3 billion.

Schwarzman has made large donations before, including $100 million to the New York Public Library, and larger sums to found scholarship scheme at China’s Tsinghua University modelled on the Rhodes scholarship. He has also donated $350 million to AI research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Schwarzman explained his interest in the problems surrouding AI technology: “I could see as a result of my trips to China, where I would be meeting all these people starting AI companies, that AI is an explosive force that is going to change the world we live in in the next 10 to 15 years in a very profound way, some for good and some not so good.

“So there was a real need to control the introduction of those technologies to the benefit of society, and what I realised is that Oxford had certain unique characteristics through its work on the humanities and philosophy that would complement what the ‘hard’ scientists were doing around the world.”

Schwarzman attended Yale alongside George W. Bush, both of whom were part of the elite Skull and Bones society. Michael Gross, author of a book about the building the tycoon lives in, describes him as “the epitome of American capitalism.”

Should we reduce tuition fees?

Yes – Marcin Pisanski

A typical student matriculating at a university in England in 2019 will accrue over £27,000 in student debt by the end of her 3-years undergraduate degree. While this amount is incomecontingent, and no repayments are owed below certain salary threshold – currently £25,725 – the debt contributes to increased anxiety levels for youth in their early twenties and constitutes an undue burden on those from most underprivileged backgrounds and graduates who did not secure high-paying jobs following their education.

Cutting annual tuition fees to £7,500, as proposed in the Augar review commissioned by Theresa May, would reduce some of those problems and is a move in the right direction. There are obvious societal benefits to having an educated population and no one should be penalised for exercising their right to quality education. Lower fees and reintroduction of maintenance grants will combat some of the inequalities plaguing higher education and allow for more meritocracy in the earliest stages of adult life.

The UK can learn from the example set by many other European countries where education is much cheaper and where everyone benefits as a result: students from the opportunity to develop themselves without the additional stress of few decades of debt repayment and the nation from increased social mobility and better educated workforce.

Current £9,250 does not cover all of the economic costs of a year at university in any event, as the universities themselves make evidently clear by charging non-EU students three or four times that amount. There is thus no convincing reason why the government may not take more of that burden on itself if it does already pay the majority of the costs incurred by universities.

The reduction must then go hand-in-hand with increased grants and other funding to universities so that they will not have to compromise on their teaching standards, educational resources and access provisions. There is no good in charging students less if the universities would end up worse off in the process and see the world-leading position of English institutions threatened in the long term.

Special care must also be taken to ensure that the reforms do not end up regressive in their nature. Proposed extension of loan repayment terms from 30 to 40 years would undermine the whole change and make people in their 60s pay for training that clearly did not benefit them enough to have been worth the effort.

This could mean that low earners would end up paying more in the process while high earners would benefit from reduced fees. As such, lower tuition fees should not be seen as an end in and of itself but rather as a part of comprehensive system of reforms that should ultimately make university degrees more accessible. A reform including reduced debt, maintenance grants, explicit expected parental contributions, and preservation of current fee liability period could be a good first step towards that goal.

Let’s hope the government will take on this challenge and will not let the issue be buried along with the Prime Minister who commissioned the report.

No – Thomas Laver

While the government’s offer to charge £1,750 a year less for university might seem initially appealing, the proposal as a whole largely fails, and needs serious reworking in order to improve our higher education provision. The cutting of feed is a fundamentally misguided and regressive idea that implemented in this manner will only give the rich ever more a financial advantage in accessing higher education.

The key issue is changes to repayment boundaries, lowering the income threshold for repayment while extending the period before student loan debt is forgiven. This means that more graduates on lower incomes will pay to service their student loan, while the longer period for repayment means anyone with a student loan will be repaying this for longer. Longer time until debt forgiveness will continue to affect those on lower incomes as interest remains at extortionate rates, likely almost completely wiping the benefit of £5,250 less for a degree through the horrors of compound interest, and forcing repayments to continue for the entirety of the 40 years. Here we are moving towards a system in which those on the vast majority of incomes are paying more to service their student loan debt than before, hurting the less prosperous in society.

All this means is that the only benefits of this scheme will accrue to those rich enough to pay upfront for their degree, paying far less to avoid the full working lifetime of repayments everyone else continues to face. What is needed is not slightly lower fees coupled with longer repayment schedules, as this makes our system even worse: what is required is a graduate tax, levied equitably upon all graduates in a manner that prevents the rich from escaping the continuing financial burden levied upon everyone else. To do otherwise would be to ignore the real outcomes by focusing excessively – and idiotically – on the initial fee. But students are not the only ones hurt here.

While the extension of repayments makes this proposal relatively economically sound for the government, universities will be receiving far less money per student. Such pressures on already financially stretched institutions can only worsen the quality of higher education provision, with the need to on-board unrealistically high numbers of extra students resulting in crowded classrooms, shoddily expanded facilities, and negligible real teaching hours. The government is suggesting financial measures to boost their funding, but aren’t committing to anything that will suggest their overall funding won’t drop.

Since 2011, there has been an excessive focus placed upon the £9,000 (then £9,250) level for tuition fees, and it is manifesting today in a regressive proposal designed to be politically amenable but economically regressive. A graduate tax is a fairer, more equitable solution to the Kobayashi Maru of reconciling student fees to university funding, and we must not accept this Trojan Horse ‘gift’ of lower initial fees.

Challenges to Union election results threaten McGrath’s presidency

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Two challenges to the results of Thursday’s Oxford Union elections may see President-Elect Brendan McGrath unable to take up the Union Presidency in Michaelmas, whilst the election of Lee Chin Wee to the position of Secretary may also be challenged.

The two allegations of electoral malpractice were announced by the Union’s Returning Officer this evening, and detail claims of electoral malpractice by Ayman D’Souza, Lee Chin Wee, and Brendan McGrath.

The first allegation, lodged by ‘Unlock the Union’ campaign manager Sam Burns, deals with a claim that Ayman D’Souza made an “unsubstantiated factual claim” in the run-up to the election. Cherwell understands that this refers to D’Souza’s accusation that a piece of incorrectly filled out paperwork which prevented him from running for Librarian had been forged.

The second allegation, by former Union Press Officer Daniil Ukhorskiy constitutes an accusation that Lee Chin Wee deliberately hindered the Returning Officer in the conduct of his duties, and that McGrath aided Lee in doing this.

In an electoral tribunal, the latter allegation could see McGrath removed from office as President-Elect, whilst the election for Secretary could be re-polled.

The first allegation could further see a tribunal rule that the conduct of Sara Dube’s ‘RISE’ campaign had compromised the integrity of Thursday’s elections. This could lead to a rerun of the entire election.

Daniil Ukhorskiy told Cherwell: “I can confirm I made an allegation of electoral malpractice under rule 33(a)(i)(16): deliberately hindering or attempting to hinder the Returning Officer in the discharge of their duties as well as 33(a)(i)(24): aiding and abetting such an offence.

“The tribunal panel will meet sometime this weekend, given the fact that this is an ongoing allegation I do not wish to comment further on the substance of the the allegation.”

Similarly Samuel Burns said “The Union’s electoral rules explicitly forbid the making of unscrutinised factual statements for electoral gain.

“Mr D’Souza’s troubling allegations of a conspiracy to derail his nomination through forgery, casting insulting aspersions on his opponents and the integrity of the electoral system, fall under this category.

“There is a procedure for dealing with the sorts of behaviour he claimed occurred, and that is not making utterly unsubstantiated comments in a public forum. While Mr D’Souza was of course not elected treasurer, I firmly believe that the rules must be upheld and a strong precedent set for future elections.

“An election in which one side is allowed to throw such allegations around with no evidence or substantiation, beyond spurious claims about condiment stains, does not have a level playing field.”

The Oxford Union, RISE, and Brendan McGrath have been contacted for comment. The Returning Officer declined to comment.

New College JCR debates gender-neutral bathrooms

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New College JCR is expected to continue debating whether to ask college to refurbish all gendered bathrooms into single, gender-neutral toilets. An earlier motion, which the MCR unanimously voted to support, was narrowly voted down in the JCR last week after lengthy discussion.

Last week’s motion, which had been put forward by Rose Laurie and Oliver Smith, raised the point that “gendered toilets are considered exclusionary for non-binary and gender non-conforming people, and also create considerable anxiety and the risk of harm for trans people”.

On a motion concerning the facilities of the whole college the assent of both the JCR and the MCR would have been required for any changes to be made. The motion passed unanimously in the MCR last Sunday with 23 votes after a period of discussion. However the motion had a mixed reception in the JCR, with some JCR members feeling the motion did not go far enough, and others very concerned about the way the motion could impact other groups.

The motion was rejected by 52 votes to 47, with 36 abstentions. An amended motion was proposed but this also failed to pass.

JCR and MCR LGBTQ+ reps are now considering how to address this, with the expectation being that an amended motion will be brought to the JCR.

JCR members in particular raised concerns as to what would happen with interim changes in signs, as the motion had requested that there should be immediate sign changes to some of the main bathrooms on the college site, with the MCR building men’s toilet and Long Room men’s toilet signs being replaced with signs saying “All-Gender toilets”.

The sign changes would be a temporary measure before the college refurbished the bathrooms into single,

The authors of the motion raised the point that Oxford’s Equality and Diversity Unit makes eight recommendations to improve trans rights on its website, one of which is to provide gender-neutral bathrooms where possible. They state: “The University recommends that the provision of some gender-neutral facilities is considered in every new build and refurbishment. Ideally these should include single cubicle gender neutral toilets, with integrated washing facilities and floor to ceiling doors.”

The motion argued that: “Making all New College bathrooms gender neutral will send the signal that trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming students, staff, and visitors are welcome at New College and that we as a community respect their basic needs, their human dignity, and their valuable contributions to our communities.

“Attending to the needs of one marginalised group within New College should not come at the cost of another marginalised group.

“Until adequate gender-neutral facilities can be constructed, some (self-identifying) women-only toilets should remain.

“Having had conversations with college, we believe that asking for the refurbishment of all gendered New College bathrooms before the beginning of the 2024/25 academic year does not pose undue demands on college budget, and will allow for these changes to be integrated into short-term and middle-term maintenance works the college plans to undertake.”

The motion had to be amended significantly to ensure that women-only bathrooms could still be available to visitors. Originally, these were to be in the Sacher building, which is only accessible to students who have Bod Cards, and concerns were raised by members of the JCR about how this could affect visitors to the college.

In the JCR meeting it was pointed out that it was important to ensure that “groups which are particularly likely to require a women’s only place for religious or cultural reasons, considering groups like the Muslim Schools which visit on access programmes such as Step Up, have access to the Long Room toilets and not the Sacher toilets.”

Another issue raised was that “it is not desirable to give more people access to a building where people live simply to use a bathroom that could easily be located elsewhere. While there are already some problems with this elsewhere in college, it is not desirable to amplify the problem.

“There are also less options for third and fourth year accommodation, so if students wish to live in a space without general Bodcard access, it would be much harder to do so.”

Rose Laurie, JCR LGBTQ+ rep, said: “I’m very pleased that the MCR has got a motion passed as this is an important step forward. It is clear New College JCR rejects motion to make all bathrooms gender-neutral from the way that the JCR voted that there are still many disagreements and we need to work to find a compromise on the labelling of the college bathrooms, but in the meantime we hope to get college to commit to refurbishing all bathrooms by 2024/2025.”

Moritz Reithmayr, MCR LGBTQ+ rep, said: “As the MCR LGBTQ+ Reps, Giulia and I are delighted about how convincingly our motion passed. We hope that this will prove an important milestone toward making New College more inclusive and transforming all New College bathrooms into individual gender-neutral toilets with integrated washing facilities.

“As the next step, we are hoping to gain JCR support before we enter into further talks with New College administration. We have seen more and more colleges become more trans-inclusive in their bathroom design over the recent years, and we hope that New College will institute similar progressive changes.”

In Michaelmas, the New College JCR voted in favour of changing the signing for the Long Room and Sacher Building toilets to make them gender-neutral. The MCR never voted on this motion, but concerns were raised informally in an MCR discussion, including about how the motion might affect women, and so ultimately no change was made at this time.

Currently, twelve Oxford colleges have primarily or entirely gender-neutral toilets. These include Hertford, Balliol, St Benet’s Hall, St John’s, St Hugh’s, St Catherine’s, St Hilda’s and Somerville.

UEFA Nations League: fun or flop?

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Last Sunday, when Portugal won their second ever international trophy, defeating the Netherlands 1-0 to win the UEFA Nations League, questions were raised on the subject of the validity of the competition.

Never before has there been a competitive trophy in European International football besides the European Championships and the World Cup, yet one question remained about the inaugural Nations League: is this a new and refreshing competition that is here to stay? Or will it be short-lived, given its occurrence inbetween major international tournaments and lack of international significance?

I happen to believe that this year’s inaugural Nations League was a resounding success. While many players will have been fatigued given their lack of a break following the 2018 World Cup, the 2018-19 domestic season and now the Nations League, it allows players another opportunity to achieve international glory with their country and gives International friendlies more of a purpose, given that the winners of each group enter into playoff rounds for a spot in Euro 2020.

After the culmination of the domestic season, as would so often be the case, teams would be forced to jet halfway across the world to play unimportant friendlies for the national team, which offer nothing but the opportunity for the team to play together. The Nations League, on the other hand, makes International fixtures competitive at every level due to the tiered system, and allows for promotion and relegation, meaning that there is an incentive for every team taking part. For example, teams such as Georgia and Kosovo won their respective groups in League D, and hence will progress to League C in the next Nations League, and have also secured a play-off fixture for a place at Euro 2020, which would be extremely difficult for such teams to secure through the traditional route.

Following the culmination of the Nations League, the players will still receive a large summer break until pre-season begins in July – with both the Nations League semi-finals and final being played in the same week, it barely reduces the players’ summer holidays, suggesting that fatigue will not be an issue for the following season, as has been suggested.

In the same vein, while it has been suggested that the Nations League will struggle to attract large crowds, this year’s inaugural tournament has proved that not to be the case. The Portugal vs Netherlands final entertained 42,415 fans, just under 8,000 shy of the Estádio do Dragão’s entire capacity, with over 20,000 English fans alone embarking on the trip to Porto to watch their team play in the UEFA Nations League.

It provides an alternative to the habitual international friendlies and presently the often uninspiring European qualifiers, and with a piece of silverware awaiting the winner, it certainly is a tournament that engages national teams. The Nations League also allows the opportunity for countries to claim silverware which are not usually in contention; Switzerland, for example, have never before reached an International semi-final, and came within a whisker of reaching the final, had it not been for Ronaldo’s late flurry of goals last Thursday evening.

On the issue of tiredness, England and Tottenham left-back Danny Rose stated ‘It’s not draining coming to play for your country […] whenever you’re selected for England it’s a great occasion.’ The opportunity to represent one’s country on the highest stage is a lifelong ambition for many professional footballers, and the UEFA Nations League provides them with yet another chance to compete for silverware. For the viewer, the Nations League offers so much potential. The inaugural Nations League allowed fans to engage once more with their national teams and to reduce the gap between the European Championships and the World Cup: for us, it signified more competitive football on our TV screens following the end of the domestic season.

No matter what you think of the Nations League, it appears here to stay – while Portugal have won the first, it will not be the last.

Another opportunity for both players and fans to engage with their national team and challenge for silverware should not be taken lightly, as the UEFA Nations League provides a new, refreshing and competitive avenue for International football, distracting fans from the wait for next summer’s European Championships.

The 2019 UEFA Nations League has been incredibly successful; it has brought thousands of fans to Portugal in support of their national team, made the international break more interesting and competitive, and rewarded Portugal with only their second-ever international trophy.

Why has basketball not taken off in the UK?

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This year’s NBA Finals Game 5 saw the Golden State Warriors clinch a dramatic 106-105 away win on Tuesday evening against the Toronto Raptors to keep the best-of-seven series alive. With everything on the line, this was a game that had it all: dramatic injuries, momentum swings and a last-gasp comeback to keep the Warriors in the series at 3-2 down going into game six.

This was an undeniably thrilling spectacle which had as much drama as that which we value, say, in this year’s Champions League semi-finals, yet there are far too few British sports fans who take an interest in this type of spectacle. There is the sense that there are too many basketball sceptics in Britain, whose fingers-in-ears attitude is similar to that of American sports fans who declare that “soccer” will never take off in the US.

Given that basketball, of all American sports, is the one that British sports fans are most sympathetic to, it is difficult not wonder whether any American sports – let alone basketball – will ever fully catch on in the UK. Perhaps it is the case that in each society there is a limited amount of space for popular sports. Once a particular sporting culture has established itself and the country’s sports fans’ conscience is occupied by particular sports, there is a diminished capacity for interest in additional sports. So why do the US and the UK have divergent national sporting consciences.

This links historically back to American Independence and the efforts made by the country to distinguish itself as a unique democratic and capitalistic society. Since sport plays such a central role in society, the urge to adopt national sports different to those of Britain and Europe has ultimately led to the predominance of gridiron football, baseball, basketball and ice hockey in the US.

Alongside these inherent differences in sport between countries, there are further fundamental incongruities in sporting norms between the US and the UK: a draw is a relatively common result in British team sports, whereas US team sports (of which basketball is a perfect example) often send games into overtime to determine a conclusive winner and loser; European clocks often count up in sports matches and US clocks count down; American team sports matches are more stop-start (often divided into four quarters with frequent breaks) but high-scoring, while British team sports matches are often more on-going (with just two halves) but low-scoring; unlike sports in Britain, there is no system of promotion and relegation in American professional sports, instead the leagues are closed.

These differences between the popular sports of both countries, although minor, are so fundamental that they point to the crucial incompatibility of both countries’ sport consciences. There is a predilection for more constant excitement and gratification in American sports such as basketball, while there is a predisposition for anticipation, tension and momentary excitement in British sports.

Finally, there are key organisational differences between American and British sports. Sports are and have been organised, developed and practised in different contexts in both countries: that of schools, colleges and universities in the United States, and that of voluntary clubs and associations in Britain.

This has a significant effect on the organisation of professional leagues in both countries: in America the organisational system for the major leagues such as the NBA is surprisingly socialist in nature, with the salary cap, draft process and revenue sharing providing a relatively level playing-field for all franchises. In Britain, leagues are more capitalist in nature, with far more lenient rules and limits to salaries, transfer fees, club income and other financial matters.

The incongruities touched upon above are just a few general examples of the US and UK’s differing approaches to sport – predominantly team sports which dominate the respective markets. Looking back to the thrilling NBA finals game five between the Golden State Warriors and the Toronto Raptors with these fundamental differences in mind, it is tempting to think that basketball – alongside other American sports – will always struggle to fully ingratiate itself to the UK public and media.

However, you only have to look at some of the world-renowned celebrities who are currently invested in the outcome of this year’s NBA finals to realise that the sport can also attract a global interest and eventually become popular in the UK. Canadian rapper Drake is a Toronto Raptors superfan and has attracted a lot of attention in this year’s NBA Finals for his vocal support of his local team and his courtside antics. Beyoncé, Jay-Z and Metallica amongst other celebrities were present at the NBA Finals Game 3 in Oakland’s Oracle Arena the Wednesday before last, reconfirming the link between basketball and music superstars.

Many NBA players have also established links with famous football stars and clubs, and vice-versa, a move which is likely to bring about more of a mutual understanding and respect between different countries and these different sports. NBA legend and four-time MVP Lebron James, for example, owns a 2% share in Liverpool Football Club; he paid roughly six million pounds for his original stake in 2011 and, particularly because of the club’s recent successes, this is valued at upwards of £30 million at present. In the reverse direction, famous footballers such as Neymar and Paul Pogba are avid NBA fans.

So, if anything is going to bring the sporting make-up of the US and the UK together, the advent of the internet, globalization and the cult of the celebrity is the most likely.

The journey from script to stage

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Oxford’s drama scene brims with originality, as ever more productions are being born from the minds of its students. Yet, the journey from script to stage is an oft neglected facet of student theatre. Whilst we frequently assess the quality of the performance itself, the ephemerality of the play-going experience leaves little room to dwell on events behind the scenes.

As audience members, we sometimes forego the richer story of the play’s journey to the stage, and of the people charged with bringing it there. Speaking to debuting writer Katy Holland and director Nicholas Phipps this week, I aimed to gain a first-hand insight into their personal experiences of staging an original student production. Holland, whose only prior writing experience was producing short stories for a school newspaper, is now making her way onto the Oxford drama scene, as the creative mind behind this year’s Christ Church garden play, The Oresteia.

The inspiration for this adaption of Aeschylus’ classic Greek tragedy came from an unlikely source: the television series, The Sopranos. Holland recounts spending the vacation watching countless hours of the American drama, which she says shares key themes, such as intergenerational conflict and revenge, with the classical play. The most impressive part of Holland’s method is the way in which she weaves elements of the show into her adaption. For example, the Furies, originally three actors, are merged into the character of ‘Uncle June’ (played by Omar Abdelnasser), a nod to ‘Junior Soprano.’ As the representative of an older generation in the television show, June reflects the Furies’ embodiment of the old world order. As such, Holland elucidates the ways in which modern depictions of dysfunctional families and generational conflict can allow us to access classical tragedy. Not only does her conflation of television drama and historical theatre make Aeschylus’ work more accessible, but it is reminiscent of how even seemingly disparate things can be connected by the imaginative mind.

Another inspiration for Holland’s work, which similarly finds elements of itself woven into the garden play, was a production of The Oresteia she saw at London’s Almeida theatre. Holland pays homage to this modernised production, which influenced her decision to study classics, in echoing its use of The Beach Boys’ song ‘God Only Knows’ in her own production. It was clear from speaking to Holland that this play is an incredibly personal scrapbooking of her theatrical experiences. Despite this, she says it was important to her to keep alive the spirit of its original, and to keep in mind what its original writer Aeschylus wanted to say.

Speaking about choosing the Christ Church garden play as her platform, Holland describes it as an inclusive event in which anyone from the college can get involved. The Oresteia’s journey to becoming this year’s garden play began with a discussion between Holland and the play’s director Nicholas Phipps. After determining the potential for Holland’s work to occupy the Trinity term stage, she wrote the first draft. Originally, Holland intended to only adapt the first play (Agamemnon) from the original trilogy, but after that came up a little short, she decided to add on the further two (The Libation Bearers and The Eumenides), completing them in the first week of term.

When it came to handing over her play to Phipps, Holland knew her play was in safe hands. She describes him as a ‘brilliant’ director whom she approached because of his experience (his previous involvement in drama cuppers earned him a nomination for Best Director). Whilst Holland admits that she did have a specific vision in mind for the end product of her play, she maintained a strong collaborative relationship with Phipps. The experience was ultimately an informative one, with Holland able to learn from Phipps and the actors about the practicalities of staging a play. In fact, she says it has inspired her to try directing for herself.

When asked what she has learnt from this experience, Holland gives a response which is in many ways applicable to not just the theatre, but speaks to the resilience needed for any creative pursuit: “Your first draft won’t be good,” she says, “but that’s okay.” She concludes: writing takes lots of time, and staring at a blank page is scary, but it’s always good to write something. It’s an important message for any aspiring writers out there. The journey of writing anything begins with staring at a blank page, but it has the potential to culminate in something great.

Having previously been assistant director for the New Writing Festival production Plagued, Phipps took on the role of directing The Oresteia. Looking for a potential garden play to stage, he had the idea of the adaption suggested to him by Holland and they agreed to work together on the project. His method of directing displays the careful thought and organisation required when working with such a large group of actors. Describing his approach to the play as if it was “a puzzle that needed to be solved”, Phipps’ process revolved around breaking down the play into small blocks and rehearsing these with separate groups of the cast. In doing so, he says, he had to consider both what happens in the scene and how he could make it work onstage. He also had to be aware of how he would reconstruct the “puzzle” in later rehearsals, making sure its varying elements remained cohesive.

When asked what were the biggest challenges he faced, Phipps outlines the practical elements of working with such a large cast and a comparatively small crew. Not only was it difficult to have all the actors come together at specified times, but the lack of an assistant director meant that Phipps and Holland were often left to complete extra tasks, such as sourcing props, on top of their main duties. Ironically, it is easy to forget that those behind student theatre are still students, with busy academic lives. Their dedication to staging these productions is incredibly admirable, and is demonstrated in the professionalism of the performance itself.

Of the particular considerations surrounding garden plays, Phipps says that audiences come to them with a perspective different to that of any other type of theatre. These events attract people who wouldn’t normally go to plays, says Phipps, and everyone is expecting to have a good time. Whilst he admits this attitude takes some of the pressure off the performance itself, as the audience expect less polish, the outdoor setting offers its own challenges. Rehearsing outside is rarely straightforward and the performances themselves are at the mercy of the weather, as unfortunately was the case with the penultimate performance last Friday, which was cancelled due to the rain.

As for what he learnt from his experience, Phipps highlights the ability to accept changes to an original concept and to respect the needs of the audience. What started out as an intense drama about the Mafia, he says, became in the end a fairly comedic play. As for the future, Phipps would like to be further involved in student productions but is happy to wait for the right opportunity to come along.

The Oresteia was staged in Christ Church Cathedral Gardens from Thurs 6th until Sat 8th June (6th Week).

Interview: David Aaronovitch

University Challenge has had its fair share of idiosyncratic figures over the past couple years. Just think of Ted Loveday of Hapax Legomenon fame, or Eric Monkman or, of course, Kaamil Shah, memorable for his matted vests and lustrous chains. Before all of these very minor celebrities, however, one student shook the broadcasting bureaucracy like it had never been shook before. David Aaronovitch, now a journalist at The Times, then undergraduate at Manchester, and his fellow teammates suffered a catastrophic loss in the first round, entirely due to their stubborn refusal to answer any question except with the name of a prominent Marxist, be it Trotsky, Lenin, Che Guevara, or even Karl himself. I ask David why he adopted such a radical position.

“It had been conceived from the start that it would be a two-fold protest. One against the fact that Oxbridge had so many teams that no polytechnics did. Whilst you had some arsehole college with 60 theological students with a team all of their own, these polytechnics weren’t even invited to be a part of the show. We were also a part of a major campaign to get the university to disinvest from South African companies because of our hatred of the apartheid government. We only formally had 16 guest tickets for the recording, but we managed to forge 200 hundred more, and the security couldn’t do anything but let everyone in, banners and all. As you can imagine, the show was quickly stopped.”

Aaronovitch does not make any specific comment on the selection of the Marxist icons, except in a passing comment that other revolutionary leaders would have been just as symbolically adequate. Nevertheless, I was curious to ask him, especially given his former Eurocommunist position, about his experience with the radical left, and its persistence in student politics.

“The first prejudice we held was a default radicalism towards the left. When I went up to university in the mid 70s, there was still a residue from the famous years of rebellion, those being 1968 and 1969. Very, very few people were on the right. The other thing was a hostility towards business. I can’t remember anyone saying that their ambition was to be wealthy or to become an entrepreneur. The assumption was that these were ignoble aspirations. The right wing for us began at the centre of the Labour party. That’s probably what the majority of people around Corbyn now believe. It’s almost as if you’ve had a takeover of the Labour party by people who resemble student radicals of the early 70s. It’s very weird.”

In 2004, Aaronovitch sat down with the late Christopher Hitchens, a man who in his memoirs bitterly criticised the modern left for losing their perspective and political vision. I mention Hitchens, curious to see whether Aaronovitch too believes the concerns of the left have ultimately become trivial. 

“Some of the things that left-wing people used to campaign for have now become common place. I find it difficult to generalise, but I do think there’s a particular kind of rarefication that can happen inside of universities, in which the debates you feel you’re having don’t actually have as much resonance on the outside. I think that may be more true now than it was when I was at university.”

Predictably, the conversation verges towards the issue of free speech. I reference his appearance on Newsnight in 2015, where he debated a representative from the Leeds Student Union on the banning of controversial speakers on university campuses. He addresses my question about the psychological motivation behind no-platforming and its targets with sceptical indignation, but also a fair amount of disappointment.

“Part of it is what Phillip Roth called the ecstasy of sanctimony. One of the things you should do as you get older, as you understand that the world is complex, is to allow people their mistakes, unless they are egregious, repeated and not really mistakes. I thought social media would make us realise that people have feet of clay, and that we should allow people to apologise when they need to apologise, and then to move on. Instead, what we have had is the pile-on, the Twitter storm, the mass condemnations, and it’s exhausting. I don’t think many people realised that this is the way social media would go, and therefore we haven’t built up the defences to fight against it. I’m not talking about shoving everyone off Facebook and Twitter, but just changing our attitudes towards what we see and read.”

Continuing down this line of thought, it seemed appropriate to mention his time on Question Time with the ever-divisive Jordan Peterson. He chuckles at the allusion, lightly mocking Peterson’s slightly foppish nature. 

“He’s rather dandyish, but he’s pleasant enough. Why shouldn’t a man be well-dressed? It tells you something, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. As far as I can see, he becomes another one of those polarising figures, even though I’m not sure if he is one in and of himself. He sort of deploys a shield and a sword. If you like him, you are to be attacked for it. If you like him, you seem to attack others. I’m not really interested in that anymore.”

From one grizzly, pallid figure to the next, Aaronovitch has been hotly reproving of Julian Assange over the past couple years. When I enquire about the cause of such disdain, he sighs and lightly nods, as if recalling an old friend. In reality, he shows very little sympathy to the recently arrested Australian. With a structured but impassioned attack on Assange’s activity, I sense this is a question he has answered before.

“When he first came along, what WikiLeaks did was entirely novel. Before you had the connected internet, it was just not possible. Journalistically, it was rather impressive. After all, a lot of journalism is about getting information from people who don’t want to give it to you. However, one of the problems with the data dump was that all of the information was coming from one side, and not the other. In other words, it would all come out of US sources, because they were less protective of their data. When the state department files were leaked, some of the things that came out compromised the safety of people who were working for democratic powers in authoritarian places. And he didn’t seem to care. I remember debating him about it when it first happened, and he just wasn’t interested. One of the patterns that became clear through his own utterances was that his dislike of authority was incredibly selective. It was by and large the Americans, and by and large what you might called liberal interventionism. He was uninterested in Putin and the Chinese – he was quite willing to see these people as allies. His greatest contempt is for liberals, which is paradoxical because it is most likely liberals who will assert his rights. If he was Russian he would probably be dead by now.”

What becomes apparent to me throughout our interview is Aaronovitch’s deep-rooted interest in unpacking the mysterious, be that the illusive individual or the multifaceted social system. It is no surprise, therefore, that he has long been fascinated with the phenomenon of conspiracy, writing a book titled Voodoo Histories: The Role of Conspiracy Theory in Shaping Modern History in 2009. Four years later, he sat side-by-side with a wide-eyed, raving Alex Jones, a guest who Andrew Neil directly labelled the “worst person I have ever interviewed.” I ask him about conspiracy in general, and how individuals like Jones affect the way we see history as well as contemporary events.

“When I wrote that book, I was just so curious about why people would choose to believe conspiracy theories when there were more plausible explanations. What’s the fun in it, why would you be seduced by it, and how damaging can it be? I think we are really getting the answer back now, which is that it is fantastically damaging. It lies behind a lot of the far right’s success in Europe and America. To give you a little example, the penultimate chapter of Voodoo Histories concerns ‘birtherism’ and Obama. It was finished in 2010 and published in 2011. A year later Donald Trump embraced ‘birtherism’ in his attack on Obama. So now we have a president who used one of the conspiracy theories I wrote about. Not a candidate. The president. This is really serious stuff. I’m not really sure he believes it himself, but he intuited that a great deal of the militant Republican base believed it, and would therefore begin to support him.”

He goes off on a little tangent about Trump at this point.

“He’s an incredibly intuitive person rather than a strategic person. In fact, in some ways, you could argue that he is a dark, intuitive genius, not even understanding his own nature himself. He kind of knows what is really bad about us, because he is a genuinely terrible person. One of the biggest liars to be elected as the leader of a democratic state, ever. That’s not some ‘I don’t like him’ hyperbole, but just analytical truth.”

We jump to another individual that Aaronovitch has discussed at length: Shamima Begum. Interestingly, he shows a great deal of sympathy towards her.

“Firstly, we have a distinction between a child and an adult for a reason. If Shamima Begum at fifteen, instead of going to Syria, had slept with someone, the adult would have been prosecuted because she was a minor. We have these rules for a reason. She got seduced into thinking that it would be a good idea – she’s a kid. She has also been pretty much pregnant since she got there, and has seen three kids die. There’s one more thing: she’s British. She went to Syria, and made a nuisance of herself to people who really didn’t need any more bloody nuisance. We then turn around and say that it’s her problem. That’s immoral. It’s also immoral towards the people there, the Kurds especially, who have to deal with it. It’s so easy to say that we should leave her there, to neglect it and forget about it. Where does that take you?”

I ask him whether the situation is complicated by the fact that Begum has showed little remorse up to now.

“It is complicated by that. It just goes to show how completely hopeless she is in creating a case for herself. What does one expect? Do we expect them to be brilliant person-to-person intellectuals. One other thing that we have to take note of is that we have created rules that protect the minority from the majority for a reason. We could all be a minority at some point or another, who find themselves in the shit. We require in a democracy not the rule of the majority, but the rule of the law. The rule of the majority is no guarantee of human rights at all. Think about Myanmar.” 

Having touched on individual cases, I could not help but discuss perhaps the most polarising political problem of them all. Aaronovitch does shy away from Brexit; in fact he seems to intellectually revel in all its twists and turns. Frustrated though he seems, he refuses to stop fighting for what he believes in. An ardent Remainer, a wholehearted European, it is here he becomes most vivacious. 

“It turned out that people who wanted to leave didn’t have the faintest idea what leave meant. The politicians have significantly changed their minds about what Brexit means without ever acknowledging it, and I find that remarkable. For example, Nigel Farage always used to speak about how Norway was doing pretty well outside the EU and were setting an example for how we could be. When we came out, he said if we followed Norway’s system it would be treachery and betrayal. This is not hyperbole. That is literally what happened. I think that’s a sign of the weakness of their argument.”

At this point the pace of his speech increases, his eyes feverishly lighting up.  

“This is the one that would get me going. This is the one that will really affect your future,  a decision formed on an ultimately cavalier basis by a group of ancient politicians who really didn’t give a bugger. The people’s whose future depends on this question are overwhelmingly against the thing we have decided for their future. That’s a problem. Why is nobody talking about that problem? All we are doing now is talking about a bunch of old people getting cross. One of the things that is really driving me around the bend at the moment is this sort of liberal defeatism, the idea that the right is on the march and we can’t do anything about them. We’ve got bloody irons in this fire, we’ve got horses in this race. Why is everyone else allowed to be angry?”

As the mere student journalist, I’m a tad taken aback by the sudden vigour. I attempt to moderate the matter, stressing the difficult complexity of Brexit. He responds curtly.

“I don’t think it’s particularly difficult. To be honest Darius, if I were your generation, I’d be so fucking furious about the whole thing that I’d burn the place down.”

Dube wins Union Presidency as “Unlock the Union” slate struggles

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Sara Dube has been elected to serve as Oxford Union President in Hilary 2020 after a three way race that saw her claim 521 first preference votes over Charlie Coverman’s 355 and Amy Gregg’s 244.

Candidates representing Dube’s “RISE” slate also succeeded in securing the offices of Treasurer-elect (Beatrice Barr) and Secretary-elect (Lee Chin Wee).

In the race for Librarian-elect – for which “RISE” did not nominate a candidate due to an incident in which the expected candidate, Ayman D’Souza, was instead nominated in the Treasurer-elect race – Coverman’s “2020 Vision” slate successfully elected Spencer Cohen in a close race with Mo Iman, a member of Gregg’s “Unlock the Union” slate.

2020 Vision were also successful in nomination the candidates with the most first preference votes in the races for Standing Committee (Chengkai Xie), and Secretary’s Committee (Geneva Roy).

The night was disappointing for the Unlock the Union slate, who took 1 of the 7 places on Standing Committee and 2 of the 11 places on Secretary’s Committee. By contrast, RISE claimed 2 places on Standing Committee, while 2020 Vision won 3, and RISE saw 5 of its candidates elected to Secretary’s Committee to 2020 Vision’s 4.

Speaking to Cherwell about the results, Unlock the Union said: “We are, of course, disappointed with this morning’s results. But we are also so proud of every member of our team, they’ve all put in so much work – and we are really pleased for the members of our team who were successful.

“We wish both other campaigns the best and hope that the winning officers will push for the substantial change the Union needs.”

One independent candidate, Joseph Grehan-Bradley, was successfully elected to Standing Committee. Speaking to Cherwell, Grehan-Bradley said: “I’m absolutely delighted to have been elected, and to have finished third. I’m so grateful to all the people who took time out from their busy schedules yesterday to drop me a vote.

“I hope to affirm their confidence in me next term by acting as a voice for change in the union, and by delivering on my pledge to hold a referendum on the question of abolishing slates.”

The closely-fought three-way election was fought on a number of issues, with RISE pledging to spend less on committee and more on members, to negotiate a discounted Plush entry price for members, and to move the membership registration process online. 2020 Vision had pledged to offer £1 pints during happy hour at the Oxford Union bar, to organise movie screenings with actors and directors, and to invite more BME speakers. Unlock the Union’s offers included accrediting a living wage for all Union staff, filming YouTube debate tutorials, and tabling a referendum on banning slates.

Dube, Barr, and Cohen will serve their terms as President, Treasurer, and Librarian in Hilary term of 2020, while Lee will assume the role of Secretary in Michaelmas term of 2019.

Cherwell has contacted the RISE and 2020 Vision campaigns for comment.