Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Acting on Evidence: How Medical Research has informed Historical Drama - Professor John Powell

John Powell is an experienced medical advisor on a range of television dramas including Casualty 1909 and Downton Abbey. In this lecture he will explain how research in hospital archives and in medical journals has informed drama storylines, and how the television medical advisor works with the writer, the director and the production team on the script and on set.

Britain Needs an Ivy League - Professor Terence Kealey

rofessor Kealey argues the case for world-class universities being established in the UK as charitable bodies independent of the state for teaching, alongside the benefits of access to state funding for research. The lecture is delivered by Professor Terence Kealey, Vice-Chancellor, Buckingham University, with a response by Professor Malcolm Gillies, Vice-Chancellor, London Metropolitan University. The event is chaired by Dame Judith Mayhew Jonas.

West End Theatre in China - David Lightbody

What does the success of the Mandarin version of Mamma Mia! say about modern China and other opportunities for British theatre in East Asia?

Is the growth in the emerging economies additional? - Professor Douglas McWilliams

What are the limits to world economic growth from an environmental and economic perspective? Will inflation caused by rising primary product prices be likely to be the key constraint on economic growth? Douglas McWilliams, Thras Moraitis and Mike McWilliams consider whether this constraint will bite at a sufficiently slow rate for the impact of the extra growth in emerging economies to mean that the West will have to grow more slowly.

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Markets in their Place: Moral Values and the Limits of Markets - Lord Plant

How are we to understand the moral basis of markets? For example property rights, the role of trust in economic exchange and questions of justice in relation to markets.

Reducing Inequalities in Child Health: What counts? What works? What matters? - Professor Helen Roberts

In the UK, children from poorer backgrounds are more likely to be born small, born early and die in childhood. Professor Helen Roberts describes something of what counts, what works and what matters in the fight against inequality in child health.

Is Theatre History? The Alternative Explosion - Sam Walters

We have just lived through the century of film and television, and now we are in the new digital age. Is the survival of the theatre now really threatened? If so, how should the challenge be met?

Vienna and Schubert: Piano Duet Fantasy in Fm, D. 940 - Professor Christopher Hogwood

A lecture by Christopher Hogwood on Franz Schubert and Vienna, followed by a full performance of Schubert's piano duet Fantasy in F minor D.940 by Florian Mitrea and Alexandra Vaduva.

Monday, 1 October 2012

Ghosts of Departed Quantities: Calculus and its Limits - Professor Raymond Flood

The history of calculus and the origins of what is now called analysis, from the 18th to the 19th Centuries. On the way figures such as Newton, Leibniz, Bishop Berkeley and Augustin-Louis Cauchy will be addressed.

The Black Death - Professor Sir Richard Evans

The history of the Bubonic Plague and its devastating effects on medieval Europe, but also its other appearances in world history such as in 6th Century Byzantium and in Asia throughout the 19th century.

In Mahler's Footsteps - Keith James Clarke

Architect Keith James Clarke experiences the Austrian landscape and scenery that inspired Mahler. He travels by foot and bicycle to rediscover Mahler's much-loved haunts.

Cary Grant: Hollywood's exquisite, charming enigma - Geoffrey Wansell

To millions of moviegoers around the world Cary Grant epitomises the glamour and style of Hollywood in its golden years. With his luminous dark hair and mischievous smile he was one of its greatest stars. This lecture is an attempt to look behind the mask he presented to the world.