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Humanitas Programme

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The Humanitas Programme.

The Humanitas Programme is a series of Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England, intended to bring leading practitioners and scholars to both universities to address major themes in the arts, social sciences, and humanities.

Appointed for a given academic year, each Humanitas Visiting Professor delivers a series of events ranging from lectures to workshops, masterclasses, recitals and symposia. Lectures and symposia are filmed and available online to audiences throughout the world [1]

Created by Lord Weidenfeld in 2010, the Humanitas Programme is funded by a number of donors and managed by the Oxford-based Weidenfeld-Hoffmann Trust. The Humanitas Programme has also been run in collaboration with TORCH The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities and CRASSH Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

The Humanitas Programme often draws media attention for its topical and high-profile speakers, such as Eric Schmidt sharing a positive outlook on the impact of new technologies on our world, or Murray Perahia exploring the personal and universal in the work musical genius, or Shirin Neshat discussing the formation of her artistic identity.

Its Visiting Professorships have touched upon topics ranging from the complexity of narrating history to the challenges of sustainable development in the 21st century.[1]

List of Humanitas Visiting Professorships

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Visiting Professorship in Architecture University of Oxford, Brasenose College

  • 2010–2011: Lord Foster (architect), How do we sustainably accommodate even larger populations in cities in a way that does not recklessly deplete natural resources?
  • 2011–2012: Lord Foster (architect), Heritage and Lessons

Visiting Professorship in Chamber Music University of Cambridge, Peterhouse

Visiting Professorship in Chinese Studies University of Cambridge, St Catharine's College

  • 2011–2012: Wu Hung, Reading Absence in Chinese Art and Material Culture
  • 2012–2013: Chen Yung-fa, The Meaning of the Chinese Communist Revolution
  • 2013–2014: David Wang, What is Chinese about Chinese Literature?
  • 2014–2015: Xu Bing, The Reactivation of Tradition

Visiting Professorship in Classical Music and Musical Education University of Oxford, St John's College

  • 2012–2013: Imogen Cooper (pianist), Schubert
  • 2013–2014: Midori (violinist and educator), Bach, Brahms, Music Education and Community Engagement
  • 2014–2015: Ian Bostridge Why Winterreise? Schubert's song cycle, then and now
  • 2015–2016:Sérgio and Odair Assad

Visiting Professorship in Comparative European Literature University of Oxford, St Anne's College

Visiting Professorship in Contemporary Art (including photography) University of Oxford, Magdalen College

  • 2010–2011: Thomas Struth (photographer), Do pictures contribute to identity and cultural difference?
  • 2011–2012: Shirin Neshat (artist and filmmaker), Images and History
  • 2012–2013: William Kentridge (artist), Thinking On One's Feet
  • 2013–2014: Vik Muniz Class Dismissed . . . Art, Creativity and Education
  • 2014–2015: Maya Lin Between Art and Architecture

Visiting Professorship in Drama University of Oxford, Brasenose College

Visiting Professorship in Economic Thought University of Oxford, All Souls College

Visiting Professorship in Film & Television University of Oxford, St Anne's College

Visiting Professorship in Historiography University of Oxford, Trinity College

Visiting Professorship in the History of Art University of Cambridge, Clare College

Visiting Professorship in the History of Ideas University of Oxford, Merton College

  • 2012–2013: Lorraine Daston (Executive Director of the Max Planck Institute, Berlin), Nature's Revenge: A History of Risk, Responsibility, and Reasonableness
  • 2016–2017: Jared Diamond (Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles), The Use of Religion

Visiting Professorship in Intelligence Studies University of Oxford, All Souls College

  • 2013–2014: General Hayden (Former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency), Terrorism and Islam's Civil War
  • 2014–2015: John McLaughlin (Former Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency), Challenges Facing American Intelligence

Visiting Professorship in Interfaith Studies University of Oxford, Lady Margaret Hall

Visiting Professorship in Media University of Cambridge, St John's College

  • 2010–2011: Mathias Döpfner (CEO of Axel Springer AG), ‘The Freedom Trap’, ‘The Internet – a Liberating or Enslaving Machine?’ and ‘Can Journalism be Free in the Digital Age?'
  • 2011–2012: Manuel Castells (UCLA), Communication Power in the Network Society
  • 2012–2013: Eric Schmidt (Executive Chairman of Google), Our Connected Age
  • 2013–2014: Alastair Campbell (former Director of Communications and Strategy to Prime Minister Tony Blair), A Life at the Nexus of Media and Politics
  • 2014–2015: Emily Bell, (Director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism, Columbia University), The Impact of Social Media and the Internet on Journalism and News Publishing

Visiting Professorship in Museums, Galleries, and Libraries University of Oxford, Balliol College

Visiting Professorship in Opera Studies University of Oxford, New College

Visiting Professorship in Rhetoric and the Art of Public Persuasion University of Oxford, St Peter's College

Visiting Professorship in Statecraft and Diplomacy University of Cambridge, Pembroke College

Visiting Professorship in Sustainability Studies University of Cambridge, Trinity Hall

Visiting Professorship in Voice and Classical Music University of Oxford, New College

Visiting Professorship in War Studies University of Cambridge, Churchill College

Visiting Professorship in Women's Rights University of Cambridge, King's College

References

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  1. ^ "Johan Rockstrom's Lectures at University of Oxford".
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