Sunday, May 11, 2025
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Breakdown: suspensions up 68% since 2011

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The number of students suspending their studies every year has increased by 68.57% since 2011, Cherwell can reveal.

The number of suspended students rose from 506 in the 2011/12 academic year to 853 in 2016/17, despite the University’s claim that the number of students has remained “broadly steady” in the same period.

Analysis of student suspension data obtained via Freedom of Information (FoI) requests also revealed statistically significant disparities affecting how likely students are to rusticate based on region, nationality, and, ethnicity.

Oxford SU’s VP for Welfare & Equal Opportunities said the increase was “disappointing…especially among those from BAME backgrounds.”

White students make up 73.73% of suspended students, despite compromising 80.3% of total students, whilst all BME students comprised 23.21% of students suspending their studies compared 17.5% of the student body.

Chinese students appear to be particularly likely to suspend their studies, with 7.16% of suspended students coming from China, compared to only 1.6% of students at the University.

Clear national and regional differences also exist. Of those students who suspended their studies in 2016/17, 595 (or 69.75%) were classified as “domiciled in the UK”, compared to 77.9% of students. Meanwhile, international students, who make up 22.1% of students at Oxford, accounted for over 30% of suspended students in the same period.

Students from London and the South East were also less likely to suspend their studies, making up 47.9% of students at Oxford, but just 32.11% of those who rusticated.

Those from other regions of the UK accounted for almost 70% of all suspending students, but just 52.1% of the university’s total intake.

While most colleges showed suspension rates similar to their proportion of the total student body, several exhibited statistically significant differences.

At one end of the scale, Mansfield accounted for just 0.7% of suspensions over the time period, despite making up 2.32% of the University’s population.

Meanwhile, St Hugh’s accounted for over 5.6% of suspended students despite making up only 3.63% of students. Similarly, 4.1% of suspended students attended Christ Church, which makes up 2.2% of all students.

Despite concerns about the pressure they place on students to achieve strong academic results, there was not a clear relationship between colleges that perform strongly in the Norrington Table and their rates of suspension.

The largest change came from Christ Church, where 34 students suspended their studies in the 2016/17 academic year – over three times the eleven students in 2011/12, a rate far higher than the university-wide increase.

When contacted Christ Church told Cherwell: “Christ Church takes the welfare and academic progress of its students very seriously.

“While the College cannot comment on individual cases, it can confirm that it has robust systems in place to support students who encounter challenges, whether these involve medical or mental health issues, financial circumstances, or academic concerns.

“When it is agreed that suspension is in an individual student’s best interests, the College works actively with the student and relevant support staff to help them return to their studies as soon as it is appropriate.”

Oxford SU’s VP for Welfare & Equal Opportunities, Ellie McDonald, told Cherwell: “It is disappointing to see that our already high suspension rate has increased again, especially among those from BAME backgrounds.

“These figures reinforce the fact that the University is neglecting to investigate the causes of suspension and implement preventative measures to make sure that students feel like they can stay on course. We have worked closely with colleges this term to improve the current policies.”

Oxford University were contacted for comment.

Earlier this year, Cherwell revealed that more than twice as many state-educated undergraduates than private schooled students suspended their studies.

Students from the state sector have made up on average 56% of undergraduates since 2006, but 69% of all suspended students.

In addition, the course with the most suspensions has been Oriental Studies, with 30% of students in the department suspending.

Archaeology and Anthropology was the second highest, with a 16% suspension rate, while 14% of Physics and Philosophy took a year out.

Mumps return after Univ hit with outbreak

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Students at University College have been advised to “take precautions” to stop the spread of a recent outbreak of mumps.

In an email sent to all students, Univ’s Disability and Welfare Administrator, Aimee Rhead, said that those who were experiencing symptoms were to “stay in his or her room, and contact the College Nurse.”

The college also encouraged students who were diagnosed with the infection to “arrange for a parent or someone else to bring him or her home until he or she is no longer contagious.”

Infected students unable to leave their room were told to “ask a friend to bring you food and leave it outside your room.”

An anonymous second-year Univ student told Cherwell: “College seem to be monitoring it pretty closely”.

In May 2017, an outbreak of mumps occurred in colleges across the University, causing disruption to exams and sports fixtures.

At the time, Cherwell reported that as many as several dozen students were affected across the University, including major outbreaks at Exeter, Corpus Christi, and St Anne’s.

Mumps is a contagious viral infection that used to be common in children before the introduction of the MMR vaccine.

It is known to give painful swellings at the side of the face under the ears, giving a person with mumps a distinctive ‘hamster face’ appearance.

Mumps usually passes without causing serious damage to a person’s health. However, in rare instances it can lead to viral meningitis.

University College did not respond to a request for comment.

Bullingdon ban vote cancelled after raucous meeting

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Oxford University Conservative Association (OUCA) members rejected attempts to ban members of the Bullingdon Club from competing in OUCA committee elections at a meeting of Council on Wednesday night.

The meeting took place following recent attempt by OUCA President Ben Etty to ban members of the Bullingdon Club, and its subsequent reversal.

OUCA President Ben Etty told Cherwell that the events of council leading to the stopping of a vote “were extremely regrettable, but necessary to protect the Association against the actions of a minority of members”.

At Wednesday night’s meeting, a former OUCA President, Alex Bruce, put forward a Standing Order amendment which would have banned Bullingdon Club members serving on OUCA committee if passed. Cherwell understands he did this expecting the amendment to fall and to put to rest the Bullingdon ban debate.

As the amendment was moved to discussion, Etty, President-Elect James Beaumont, and Treasurer Tim Reilly abruptly closed the Council meeting. Despite subsequent attempts to continue to a vote, the issue of Bullingdon Club members and OUCA remains unresolved until next week’s meeting.

Etty told Cherwell: “Myself, the President-elect, and many others have fought tirelessly to make OUCA a more inclusive, tolerant and welcoming environment for those of all backgrounds.

“We firmly believe that banning members of the Bullingdon Club from holding office is a basic requirement for any self-respecting Association that claims to represent the modern Conservative Party.

“The events of council yesterday were extremely regrettable, but necessary to protect the Association against the actions of a minority of members whose moves to stop the Bullingdon ban are extremely frustrating and quite frankly baffling.”

According to The Oxford Student, one of the paper’s reporters was ejected from the room for their conduct being “contrary good order, offensive, demaning or otherwise unacceptable”. The reporter denies behaving in a disorderly way.

Pop and populism go hand in hand

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It seems like straight out of an episode of South Park – but it’s real. Kanye West’s recent visit to the White House was not only a bizarre display of what it means to be so celebrated, so spoiled, and so removed from real life that you literally don’t have to care about what you say anymore: it was also a painful moment of realising that pop and populism go hand in hand.

Listening to Kanye’s remarks in front of the US president, a masterly melange of politically disturbing fantasies and complete nonsense, one can’t help thinking: “Has this guy with the red MAGA hat on lost his mind?” In his defence, the 41-year-old rapper and producer has long suffered from mental health problems ranging from psychotic episodes to severe depression. But given that Kanye is known for his political awareness and for speaking out and rapping against racism in the days of George W. Bush (in Obama’s words, a true “jackass”), his performance at the White House looks less like an odd U-turn and more like a preference of style over sincerity.

While ex-president Obama hired comedian Keegan-Michael Key to be his “anger translator” at the 2015 White House Correspondent’s dinner, it seems as though Trump hired Kanye as his “swag translator”. Kanye just says it straight from the heart: “If he don’t look good, we don’t look good. This is our president. He has to be the freshest, the flyest, the flyest planes, the best factories.”

And hasn’t he got so much more attitude when evading press questions? “I don’t answer questions in simple soundbites. You’re tasting a fine wine. It has multiple notes to it. You better play 4D chess with me like it’s Minority Report. Because it ain’t that simple. It’s complex.”

This isn’t all jokes, though. Many of us found it hilarious when Donald Trump first announced that he wanted to run for president. Throughout his campaign, social media accounts were in a constant traffic jam of memes about Trump’s hands, Trump’s hairstyle, Trump’s tweets. And we keep going: “We can’t help but chuckle at an unacknowledged piece of toilet paper under Trump’s shoe!” Even a room full of diplomats couldn’t help laughing out loud when Trump’s recent address to the UN General Assembly in New York started with the words: “In less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.”

Fair enough, it is funny – but Trump is real. He really is the president of one of the most powerful nations on the planet. And that’s certainly not funny.

More concerning is that laughter and absurdity – something our social-media-conditioned, entertainment-craving minds yearn for – distract us from very troubling remarks. In the same speech to the UN, Trump also said: “We reject the ideology of globalism and accept the doctrine of patriotism.”

In the same surreal performance at the White House, a few minutes before literally hugging the president, Kanye said: “Trump is on his hero’s journey right now. And he might not have expected to have a crazy motherfucker like Kanye West run up and support, but best believe we are going to make America great.”

Kanye seems to be on a political roll this year. In April he announced that he “loves the way” Candace Owens thinks – a notorious conservative known for calling Black Lives Matter activists “victims” and tweeting that Donald Trump was not only “the leader of the free world, but the savior of it as well.” Saviour of the US, that is, “the last stand for Western civilization.”

It gets worse. Just this month, Kanye (who, by the way, intends to run for president in 2024) didn’t just pay his second visit to Trump – he also went on a visit to Uganda with his wife Kim Kardashian, where the couple met President Yoweri Museveni.

Museveni has been in power since 1986 and is known for violently repressing his opposition. He also was the only African leader who responded to Trump’s comment about “shithole countries” with praise: “I love Trump because he tells the Africans frankly… It is the fault of the Africans that they are weak.”

To all fans who still had some illusions: this is the kind of people Kanye hangs out with now.

Ultimately, apathy and lack of participation won’t be solved by social media populism or by stirring light-headed pop icons into the mix. While this kind of entertainment politics may seem fun, the stakes are high and it isn’t excitement we should strive for in politics. To the contrary: when politics is particularly boring, things are probably going well.

A vision of fear, a vision of hope

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The human body is a state subject to the visionary, the pulling transcendence of momentary experiences caught between the real and sublime.

William Blake perceived shadows in the mundane world, watching visions pass over the experiences he witnessed every day. His early notebook shows a preoccupation with human vulnerability to the weathering of higher forces – the wrath of God, the grief of love, the silenced mouth of a punished entity coursing through a violent sky.

Centuries after Blake was seized by the violence of human existence, using ink to bleed us away, Tracey Emin began creating monoprint depictions of the violence of human experience, the destructive capability of sexual desire in a world without Blake’s prophecies and the potential for renewal.

Blake and Emin illustrate the higher realm through which it is possible to enter experiences of love and grief; Blake’s recurring themes of motherhood, shadows and the imagination exist within Emin’s early work. Both artists were the enfant terrible of their period; Blake rebelled against the pursuit of “general beauty” championed by the Royal Academy, Emin continues to be criticised for her overtly confessional and violent installations. Blake’s impassioned beginnings as an artist allow comparison with the contemporary Emin; her early work presenting violent, more-than-human shadows.

Since childhood, William Blake was seized by visions. As he aged these visions took on artistic complexity, bringing into his bedroom the presence of ancient prophets and painters like Raphael.

This heightened sense of perception burns through the notes and sketches in his first notebook from February 1787 (housed in the British Library). In this, we witness the importance of artistic beginnings – there are early versions of his later etchings, and early editions of poems from the infamous ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’. The figures blur at the edges and resonate with the screams of a human existence haunted by the divine. In leaf 53, Blake has sketched a gaping profile, eyes drawn down, ruled by an unknown suffering. An unfinished centre sketch depicts an older figure guiding the body of an open-armed child.

In the last sketch, pencil seems to bleed along the paper, pulling the wings of an ambiguous angel-like creature who outstretches his thin arm. Underneath lies a seemingly dead figure, eyes upturned in a paradoxical state of pleasure and death. The wings and the corpse’s dress fray at the edges, phantoms burning away into lines of faded grey; they are an orchestra of the sublime and the mortal, playing us out in a haunting and flame-like ecstasy.

The entrance of a higher force, an unclear figure wanting to steal the mortal from their rest, cascades through Emin’s early work. Hers is a life of modern shadows, cast not from divinity but from reality – relationships, violence and sexual desire. Her 1989 monoprint, ‘ALL THINGS TO TEAR US APART’, shows two human figures in bed, their faces intertwined, becoming indiscernible from one another. Surrounding them, three dark figures reach towards the lovers to tear the covers away. These figures belong to the realm of the celestial; surrounded by the blink of stars they summon the higher forces of destruction belonging to Blake, the visions of nightmares tearing human life away from the state of existence.

Blake’s early sketches show his obsession with initiation into Experience from Innocence; the constant potentiality for innocence to be stolen or transition into adulthood. Emin’s concern is the initiation into sex, loss, and violence from a state of stolen innocence. Her 1997 ‘Scorfega’ depicts an indiscernible child mounted by a skeletal, death-like figure, their ribs sketched like an erratic heart monitor.

Blake’s Folio N73 contains a small, central sketch which resonates dramatically with Emin’s work – an elongated woman, her eyes darkened with pencil, holding an infant in her arms. Light sketching in the background creates the effect of the wall weeping. Beneath is a quotation from Milton: ‘Yet can I not persuade me. Thou art dead.” The sketch imposes the silence of unfulfilled motherhood.

For Emin, motherhood goes alongside themes of abortion, alcohol and abuse – she contorts figures in agony and grief, showing blood coming from between legs alongside the slanted words ‘Poor love I think shes lost it’ (2000) and ‘There was no where left but hell’ (2010), the latter depicting a woman strapped to a bed as she bleeds. Blake’s haunting Milton illustration corresponds to Emin’s faceless monoprints, showing the experience of pregnancy, birth, and loss remains unbound by time.

Through their early works, we can witness the initiation of two artistic minds into the violence of existence. Blake and Emin depict the violence and darkness held within beginnings – exalting their greatest concerns, exorcising their nightmares divine or mundane.

Blake’s faint, pencil note, ‘A vision of fear A vision of hope’, encapsulates the states both he and Emin desire to ignite; for Blake, the ‘vision’ takes dominion, allowing him to thread the ordinary with the divine through the medium of human states. For Emin, fear and hope form a dichotomy which splits her work but finds unity in its immediate expression of our complex humanity.

Oxford UCU fails to reach voter turnout threshold to call for strike action

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The Oxford University and College Union (UCU) has failed to meet the necessary turnout requirements to vote for strike action, despite over 70% of balloted members pledging their support for a move to action last Friday.

In a vote held on Friday 19th October, one motion calling for strike action and another calling for a marking and assessment boycott were voted for by 73.2% and 85.8% of UCU-affiliated Oxford staff members, respectively.

However, these motions did not pass because the Union failed to ballot over 50% of members as required by current UK trade union laws. This means that no strike action will be able to take place, preventing a repeat of last year’s University-wide lecturer strike.

UCU Oxford told Cherwell: “The wishes of Oxford UCU’s members have been frustrated by restrictive trade union laws… which introduced the 50% turnout requirement for industrial action with the clear aim of hampering collective action by trade unionists.”

They added: “We are discussing as a branch whether we would like to re-ballot our members to try to reach the 50% threshold.

“This will be a branch decision taken in the context of an emerging national consensus among UCU branches of the best way forward.

“In the meantime we will continue to work with and for our members on the issues raised in this ballot: declining pay, the gender pay gap, precarious contracts and excessive workload.”

With 85% of members at FE Colleges and 69% at universities voting in favour of strike action, the national UCU has also voiced concerns that “restrictive trade union laws mean that, with the exception of Northern Ireland, only those institutions where a 50% turnout is reached can act on the result.”

Head of Policy and Campaigns for UCU Matt Waddup said: “These national ballot results show clear support amongst members for action over pay.

“However, pernicious restrictions on turnout which single out trade union for special treatment mean this can only be taken forward in some institutions”.

UCU has said that it will be holding a meeting of its members in the next few days to decide whether or not to take further action.

A spokesperson for the University told Cherwell: “Higher education pay is negotiated at a national level between the Universities and Colleges Employers Association and the University and College Union.”

Balloting for a strike came after UCU rejected the Universities and College Employers Association’s final offer of a 2% pay rise for staff last May. Disputes continue between UCU and UCEA over pay.

This Woman’s Work: Why Hedi Slimane’s Re-writing of Céline Matters

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Phoebe Philo’s innovative and illustrious decade at the creative helm of Céline, and her subsequent departure, was a perfect example of the ‘key (wo)man risk’ that faces fashion houses and their parent companies.

LVMH recognised that Philo did the work of a lifetime in turning Céline from a relatively unknown, uncommercial house – initially founded to make children’s footwear in 1945 – into a brand that was iconic, chic, and coveted, yet still functional. It even spawned one of the first ever Instagram ‘it’ bags, the Luggage Tote (we’ve all seen it).

Although a financial success, Philo’s Céline meant more to the designer’s cult of ‘Philophiles’ than it ever could have to LVMH: she made clothes after her own desires for workable, classic womenswear that didn’t need to be feminine or defined by the male gaze in order to sell. It was trench coats and casual suiting to die for, which impeccably balanced masculine tailoring and luxurious creamy palettes, along with quietly cool accessories and campaigns featuring the 81-year-old Joan Didion and a make-up free Daria Werbowy. It was, ultimately, refreshing to simply see clothes made for women by a woman.

But is that really so revolutionary? After all, fashion is a woman’s domain, isn’t it? It’s trivial, unintellectual, image-obsessed, stupidly overpriced. Okay, I’m being deliberately facetious here, but whilst we might discuss the relative merits and social goods of fashion somewhere else and can certainly pull up figures on the profitability of womenswear vs. menswear for behemoths like LVMH and Kering, I would argue that fashion is markedly not a woman’s domain.

Yes, womenswear is responsible for just over 75% of revenues from the $1.7 trillion apparel and footwear market (Euromonitor 2017), so perhaps it is the female consumer’s domain, but who controls the image, brand, and authorship of womenswear? Who profits? These are questions I found myself asking when I saw images from the SS19 debut of Céline’s new artistic director, Hedi Slimane.

Given the industry’s collective slump following Philo’s departure, this was an inevitably much-hyped and much-awaited show. Not least because Slimane’s appointment was quite a volte-face for the ethos of Céline: his entire sartorial mission up to this point has seemed to rest on click-baiting followers with logo revamps and being obsessed with black.

At YSL – stripped of the ‘Yves’ and rebranded under his tenure as ‘Saint Laurent’ – he presented seasons and seasons of modish, retro-noir ideations of Parisian club youth, with plenty of black suiting and tiny sequinned dresses. Waiting apprehensively for the opening of the show (on Instagram live, obviously, not in flesh) I found that Slimane, ever the dynamist, had entered Céline to rip up its rule book and present us with a season of modish, retro-noir ideations of Parisian club youth, with plenty of black suiting and tiny sequinned dresses.

Yes, it was boring; it was hackneyed, arrogant, and just seemed to bite its thumb at everything that Philo and her team had laboured for ten years to build up. Not to mention that the models were all rail-thin and nearly all white: only nine out of 96 looks were worn by models of colour (paltry representation when we consider that NYFW shows featured an average of 45% models of colour on the runway). Unsurprisingly, it sparked a lot of outcry from fashion commentators and ‘Philophile’ consumers alike.

Slimane’s palimpsestic revision of the Céline ethos is not unprecedented, nor will it remain all that controversial. Sadly, as Tim Blanks of Business of Fashion deftly put it, “the modern world’s short memory doesn’t give a rat’s ass for heritage”; that is, what is outcry now may soon turn to controversy cash for LVMH, and people will forget that Slimane slathered his unending obsession with ‘La Jeunesse Parisienne’ all over Céline.

They will become unbothered just as they became unbothered about the guillotining of ‘Yves’ from Saint Laurent, forgetting in time that Slimane similarly cut off the accent aigu from the brand name ‘Céline’, making it just ‘Celine’. They will even forget that Slimane, with echoes of Stalin, deleted the entire Instagram history of Philo-era Céline, an act which went beyond all notions of a ‘fresh start’ and over into digital megalomania of the highest degree.

In a rare interview following his debut, Slimane himself commented: “We don’t enter a fashion house to imitate our predecessor, much less to take over the essence of their work, their codes and elements of language” (Vogue Sep 2018). It’s true, as he notes, that the history and cultural capital of Céline is not as established as Dior’s or Saint Laurent’s. But his takeover and ego-brandishing is symbolic of more than just people’s discomfort with the unabashedly ‘new’ in the face of the widely-loved old. It was a ‘f**k you’ to the framework and message that Céline embodied, of women designing for women, under a label founded by a woman.

Beyond the collection itself (mostly super-tight and super-short glittery evening dresses, ridiculous headpieces that prevented the suiting ‘androgyny’ Slimane purported to be going for, and little biker girl jackets), this felt and so frustrating to me because it recalled the systemic gender inequality that pumps itself round the fashion industry.

We have seen some major breakthroughs in the last year or so, with Maria Grazia Chiuri now at Dior, and the inimitable Claire Waight Keller heading up Givenchy; however, of all the fashion brands currently operating, only 14% are headed by a woman executive and even fewer are led by women of colour (see here). When you put this figure in the context of a student body in fashion education that is overwhelmingly made up of women (New York’s Fashion Institute of Technology reported 85% female enrolment this year), it’s all the more disappointing.

I probably don’t need to go into the ways in which the annals of power have always disregarded women’s creativity, even in a domain historically associated with feminine concerns. But I do want to stress how much of a lasting shame it is that LVMH felt that Céline’s decidedly feminist ethos, from a brand that was already a cash cow for the conglomerate, needed to be cast aside in the name of – well, what?

It is important to note that fashion has historically been a safe space for queer-identifying men and that for all the industry’s other gripping issues of racism, elitism, and general distortions of power, this aspect has been a victory for the visibility and celebration of gay men. Thus, when Slimane himself suggested that the response so far to his debut at Céline is the result of “latent homophobia”, we must listen and understand why he feels this way.

Reading some of the Anglo-American criticism of his show, this is certainly a detectable “subtext” (article here), one that is utterly disappointing and serves only to highlight the authors’ prejudices. A discussion, explicit or not, of Slimane’s sexual orientation is entirely irrelevant to an objective critique of this show: we need to be intersectional in our understandings of privilege and power in industries such as fashion, recognising that the systemic disadvantages and attitudes Slimane faces as an openly queer man do not also negate his opportunity to be anti-feminist.

I do not want to speak for queer men, but in my investigation into the reception of Slimane’s show I came across an insightful video by Youtuber HauteLeMode (also very entertaining, link here). His own comments were that “as a gay man the idea of creating a fantasy for a woman is my favourite thing about fashion… but I’ve realised that this collection is so misogynistic because this gay man has pushed aside the female consumer of Céline so he can play dress up with girls”. He even suggests that LVMH and Slimane may have used the show as a proxy to get back, somehow, at Kering, the parent company of Saint Laurent and Slimane’s former employer. If so, he argues, a brand that stood for so much to women around the world would have become a pawn in the petty squabbles of powerful men.

From proxy wars down to the highly symbolic refashioning of the Céline logo, which itself was the work of a man re-writing a woman’s name, Slimane has defaced Philo’s legacy. Perhaps many in the industry sphere will get over this, glued to the on-screen image of the next trend. However, the crying gap in the market will remain open for the sort of womenswear that allows its wearer to get on with the job whilst looking ever-chic, as Philo, herself a consummate professional and mother of two, always did. Until then, savour the pictures, save up for the vintage (the work of a lifetime, I know), and don’t forget the accent on Céline.

Bittersweet feelings after OUWAFC matches

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Only three days and two training sessions since trials, OUWAFC Blues faced Birmingham University Women’s Seconds in their first game of the season. The two teams had faced each other last year in a cup tie, with the Blues advancing to the next round 4-2, despite a two-goal deficit at the half-time whistle. A repeat of last year’s heroics was not to be however, as after an unsteady start the Blues found themselves yet again two goals down by the end of the first half.

The Blues came out a changed team in the second half and, despite growing into the game and arguably playing the better football, they couldn’t repeat history with another comeback. Of particular note in the second half was the midfield combination of Ellana, Brigid and Rani, solid centre half Alice Nichols, and born again centre forward Ella Vickers Strutt, whilst fresher Rani Wermes came closest to spoiling Birmingham’s clean sheet with a tantalising effort that other referees may have judged to have gone over the line. Although disappointed not to have taken any points from the game, the dominant second half midfield performance, and the quality displayed by this year’s freshers, mean the Blues will be confident going into next week’s game against Cambridge.

Meanwhile, the OUWAFC Furies faced recently promoted Lincoln. Despite a limited pre-season, and a couple of team members having run a half-marathon just 3 days before, the Furies quickly went 2-0 up thanks to goals from Juliette Westbrook and this year’s captain Rebecca North. Lincoln appeared to be mounting a comeback, scoring two goals, but another goal each from Juliette and Rebecca saw the Furies end the half in a dominant position 4-2 up. The second half was again controlled by the Furies, featuring a goal from newbie Martha Comerford as a product of some build up play that Barcelona would have been proud of, and an absolute screamer from centre-back Charlotte Rougier.

A 6-2 victory leaves the Furies in a good shape to tackle the rest of the season, as captain Rebecca North told Cherwell: “I’m extremely happy with the dominant performance from the Furies in our first match of the season. I thought that we gelled well as a team and the new players settled into their roles seamlessly.

“I am very much looking forward to building on this success in our next match against the University of Northampton and continuing to develop the squad dynamics for the upcoming season.”

Melodrama in the Grid

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Melodrama may not resonate as an appropriate word to describe the rigid gridline structures that the American artist Agnes Martin developed in the early 1960s. These paintings vary in size, shape and colour, but are all based on the the same visual language: thinly-traced grids, occasionally accompanied with other geometrical shapes such as dots or small triangles. Everything is controlled, tight, and calculated.

Not only does Martin’s work appear unrelated to the idea of melodrama, it seems like she actively seeks to repudiate it. Having experimented with abstract expressionism earlier on in her career, Martin moves away from it drastically in these later works. Her grids refuse the idea that the artist is psychologically bound within the making of the artwork, Martin herself stating that “the work is completely apart from the person” and that her artworks “painted themselves”. The grid exists as a structure that opposes itself to an artwork’s symbolic potential, whilst Martin’s lack of free movement shows her reticence for any form of expressionism in her art.

Using monochrome and impersonal geometric shapes to reveal the potential of art detached from its so-called poetic and biographical character was a process very much used by minimalist artists. For instance, Robert Morris’ restricted use of pre-existing geometrical shapes in his 1964 Green Gallery Show in New York exemplifies the work’s immediate and un-coded physical impact on the viewer. The absence of colour or any kind of iconographic detail assured Morris that his work did not engage in any close relationship with the viewer, which would have compromised his work’s success at “avoiding intimacy”. In fact, melodrama could be seen as the enemy of some minimalist artists, who refused to let their works be understood as an emotional recipient for any sort of interpretation that would make their work “vulnerable”.

Because of the formal qualities of Martin’s work, critics and curators were often tempted to qualify her as a minimalist, and therefore make her part of the confrontation between expressionist melodrama and the more ascetic minimalism. Martin did in fact occasionally exhibit with minimalists, though she later described this as a mistake. Martin refused the label of “minimalist artist”, claiming her right for “freedom from ideas and responsibility”. She defied any sort of artistic category, and therefore the idea that her works were trying to escape any sort of personal or emotional resonance – which would have been a distinctively minimalist approach – may now be reconsidered.

If formally her systemic and abstract grids appear to be anything but expressive, Martin’s approach to her art and her technique generates a different sensibility. Martin’s refusal to be classified as a member of the minimalist movement can be explained by her own belief that her works were expressive. They were not abstract expressionist paintings like those of Pollock, who literally poured his soul into his works, but Martin did believe her works carried meaning and emotion. In fact, the titles of her grid paintings are always very explicit, such as Friendship or Rose. Martin declares that when “I first made a grid I happened to be thinking of the innocence of trees and then this grid came into my mind”. The source of the grid is not abstract but anchored in the natural, tangible world. Moreover, she talks about her grids and “visions”, confirming her own presence in the making of the work.

Martin’s technique is extremely organic, showing her personal investment in the making of these works. Unlike artists such as Robert Morris who relied on industrial methods to create his work, Martin made these grids manually. She experimented with various materials, and finally favoured acrylic. Acrylic dries very fast, and therefore would have limited the time Martin had to create the perfect grid, constraining her to work without interruption and transforming her art-making into a meditative process. Martin suffered from schizophrenia, one of the reasons why she eventually retired from the artworld at the end of the 60s before her comeback in 1973. The concentration and mental investment in these grids represented for Martin a soothing process through which she could reconnect with the natural world, not unlike Yayoi Kusama’s therapeutic, yet more theatrical, polka dots installations. The fragility of Martin’s lines in works such as Rose, now on display at the Peggy Guggenheim Museum in Venice, further reveals how these lines are hand-drawn, making the works all the more personal and vulnerable, rather than automatic and industrial.

The therapeutic function of her hand-drawn grid canvases, as well as their spiritual connection to the natural world, allow us to question the idea that Martin’s works are devoid of all feeling. In fact, I believe Agnes Martin challenges the general assumption that melodrama is opposed to a stripped-down aesthetic. Her lines defy their declared status as fragile impersonal traces, and carry the whole emotional weight of her reaction to the world.

Martin famously stated that she painted with her “back turned to the world”. Perhaps she understood melodrama in the same way. Dealing with it through obsessive and dramatic repetition, Martin’s melodrama is not a spectacle for a preconceived and facile audience. She confronts us with fanatic repetition. The unstoppable and rhythmical sequence of lines takes on an overtly personal and expressive character and the simple grid suffices to capture and mystify the beauty of the natural world as well as the artist’s psyche. No exuberant outcry, no obvious emotional triggers. Martin re-defines melodrama as a subtle state of mind where excessive expression can reveal itself through the purest of forms and as a controlled, or uncontrollable, obsessive, repetition.

LMH considers hosting controversial Christian group

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Students at Lady Margaret Hall have opposed the college’s move to consider hosting controversial evangelical Christian group, Christian Concern, for a residential camp.

The week-long residential course organised by Christian Concern, called ‘Wilberforce Academy’, is aimed at “equipping the next generation of Christian leaders in public life”.

Christian Concern has attracted controversy for their views on a number of issues, including homosexuality, abortion, and Islam.

The organisation lists “divorce, homosexuality, and transsexualism” as “three of the most significant challenges to God’s pattern for family in today’s society”.

Members of LMH JCR debated the issue at an open meeting on Sunday evening, which concluded in a vote voicing opposition to hosting the camp, by 81 votes to eight.

The issue will be discussed at a meeting of senior college staff next week.

LMH Principal Alan Rusbridger confirmed that, as of yet, “no decision has been taken,” telling Cherwell that “Governing Body has not yet had a chance to consider the matter.”

JCR President Joshua Tulloch told Cherwell: “The JCR met to discuss, and passed a motion which outlined that they did not support the group coming. However, until a decision is made by the College, it would not be appropriate to comment further.”

Christian Concern’s website refers to “Islamic finance” and the “introduction of sharia councils” as examples of the “growing influence of radical Islam in the UK”.

In May 2013, the then-President of Trinity College apologised for hosting a conference organised by Christian Concern.

One year previously Exeter College also faced controversy for allowing Christian Concern to use their facilities. In a statement released at the time, the college said: “We believe that Exeter College is a place where students and staff alike can be free from fear and prejudice”.

The news follows last week’s announcement that LMH appointed the first Church of England vicar to be in a same-sex marriage to be their chaplain for Michaelmas.

Christian Concern have been contacted for comment.