HT23 Chronicle

Page 1

CLARENDON CHRONICLE

Oxford Recommendations

A round-up of our Scholars’ favourite places in the local community.

My Research in 50 Words

What our Scholars are working on, in a nutshell.

Hilary 2023 | Volume 11 Edited and Compiled by Isabel Parkinson | Cover Photo by Ajantha Abey

VICE PRESIDENT’S REMARKS

ISABELA MIRANDA GOMES

What a joy to be writing to you. Whilst we reflect on the amazing term we had – January blues had nothing compared to Clarendon’s will to have fun and spend time together – we look forward to the times ahead of us (brace yourselves for our Clarendon Ball!).

This was the first full term under the new Clarendon Council leadership and this time we have 22 (!) scholars committed to bringing interesting, engaging and diverse activities and events to the Clarendon community. We kicked off the first couple of weeks of Hilary Term with a Games Night (and pizza, of course) and a relaxing yoga session with our lovely instructor and ‘22 Council member, Kasia. Let's also not forget our amazing Chinese and Lunar New Year event where we shared traditions and great cuisine to welcome in the Year of Rabbit.

In weeks three and four, to celebrate our diverse community, we had a Cultural Potluck Dinner at LMH with dishes that tasted like home and stories that brought us closer to each other’s cultures! Later on, Clarendon Book Club met at Keble College to discuss 'The Trees' by Percival Everett – a bold and provocative book that questions racism and police violence. We also launched four tours with Uncomfortable Oxford, learning all about the hidden histories of the British empire, and the racial, class-based, and gendered discrimination that surround us, highlighting how these legacies have an enduring impact on our lives today.

Valentine’s Day fell on week five and seemed like a great excuse to go and share the love at Disco Ice Skating! We also went to a magic (yes, magic) brunch at Christ Church. In week seven, we ventured (just) a little bit further from Oxford and checked out TEDx Manchester. March also meant it was time to celebrate the powerful and brilliant women in our community. Obviously, one day isn’t enough to celebrate our amazing Clarendon women, so we celebrated for three! At our International Women’s Day High Tea event, we had the chance to discuss the timeline of women’s scholarship here in Oxford and the significant gap between the founding of the university and the admission of women.

Phew! This has been a busy term full of celebration. But fear not, this is not the end of the fun. Many events filled with joy and celebration await us in Trinity Term! Get ready to don your gowns and/or dinner jackets and let’s party the evening away at our May Day Ball!

ISABEL PARKINSON EDITORIAL

Well, if ever there was a time for Clarendon’s customary clutch of events, it’s Hilary Term. Formal dinners, board game nights, ice skating, the book club, and brunch at Christ Church have done a fantastic job of tempering those soggy days and chilly evenings and, if not quite lessening our collective postgraduate workload, brightening it up somewhat.

Hilary Term is normally the term of the biggest transition, I think — beginning as it does in the very middle of winter and ending with daffodils and those first don’t-need-acoat days, the promise of sunny Trinity Term just around the corner: endless days of punting and picnics, watching nervous crowds of undergraduates hare around the city in their subfusc, the return of the Clarendon Ball..!

To all our Scholars, I hope you have a very pleasant and/or productive Easter vacation (delete as applicable!), and enjoy reminiscing about Hilary Term 2023.

CLARENDON CHRONICLE 2 | HILARY 2023

HILARY TERM IN REVIEW

We’ve kept ourselves busy this term with our regular events getting literary with the Book Club, getting chill with yoga classes as well as a variety of exciting one-off events, both in Oxford and further afield. We celebrated our remarkable diversity (and remarkable appetites) at our Cultural Potluck dinner; headed up to Manchester to soak up some big ideas at the TEDx conference; and celebrated International Women’s Day with High Tea at the Ashmolean Museum. St Edmund Hall hosted us and the WHT Scholars for an indulgent Ninth Week dinner, and we rounded off the term with a pottery class!

CLARENDON CHRONICLE

While the second term is informally known as “Hell ary”, with its strenuous academic workload and unpredictable weather, I found it to be rather pleasant. From a course trip to UNESCO headquarters in Paris, to a range of improv comedy nights every Monday, to rejoicing at the colours of Holi, Hilary was a breeze!

RECOMMENDATIONS

With so many of our incoming Scholars being new to Oxford, we wanted to help them explore their new home as much as possible as well as give Oxford veterans a few fresh ideas for places to visit.

We’ve been collecting our Scholars’ favourite places on our social media this term and in Michaelmas: there’s been an abundance of food, cosy work spaces, independent shops, college cats (Admiral Flapjack from St Hugh’s pictured below!) and favourite spots for some fresh air and impressive views.

Follow us on Instagram, @Clarendon_OU, to keep up to date with all the new hidden gems we uncover!

CLARENDON CHRONICLE OXFORD
Image credits to respective owners, full details on our Instagram page.
6 | HILARY 2023
View of the Radcliffe Camera taken by Clarendon Scholar Sarah Savić Kallesøe, from University Church, with All Souls College to the right and Brasenose College to the left. The image is a composite of 635 images, each with four seconds of exposure. You can see the full range of Sarah’s work at: https://oxfordbynight.square.site/.

On 11 February, I attended ‘From Crisis to Co-op’ as a delegate for the Oxfordshire Co-operative Party. The theme of the conference was the role co-operative enterprises can play in supporting people through the UK cost of living crisis. The event was organised by Co-operative Futures, a Gloucester based consultancy, which specialises in community ownership.

The day began with a panel discussion. First, we heard from Elizabeth Anderson (Digital Poverty Alliance) on the problems of inadequate access to technology and the importance of digital rights for all. The second speaker was Claude Hendrickson (Frontline and Community Self-Build Agency) who spoke about how community projects can get people onto the housing ladder. The third was John Witcher (Fuel Poverty Action) who drew attention to the recent win concerning the exposure of the force-fitting of prepayment meters by energy firms. The final speech was by Dee Woods (Granville Community Kitchen; Landworkers’ Alliance) who stressed the importance of improving accessibility to good food.

After that, there were a series of roundtable talks. I contributed to the discussions regarding digital poverty, workplace organising, and community organising. The aim was to make suggestions for action. Here are a few examples. First, a digital version of the Warm Spaces community scheme. Second, to press for a 3-month freeze following the sale or bankruptcy of a company to allow workers the opportunity to place a bid. Third, to call out gatekeeping behaviour from vested interests, especially on councils.

Throughout the afternoon, there were opportunities to network with fellow co-operators, from around the UK, and to learn from them about their work. A highlight here was hearing of the Ultimate Picture Palace on Cowley Road, Oxford’s only community owned cinema. Having gone in the weeks following the conference, I would highly recommend a visit.

The conference concluded with a call to ‘bring joy to a difficult struggle’.

My Research in 50 Words

CLARENDON CHRONICLE SCHOLAR
NEWS
My primary research focus is on neuroimaging of cerebral small vessel disease, a group of conditions that affect small blood vessels in the brain and cause cognitive impairment, motor dysfunction, or stroke. CSVD is associated with hypertension, diabetes,andothervascularrisksand is a leading cause of age-related braindisorders.
- Sheng Alex Yang, DPhil in Clinical Neurosciences

www.clarendonscholarsassociation.co.uk

www.ox.ac.uk/clarendon

Instagram: @clarendon_ou

Twitter: @clarendon_ou

LinkedIn: Clarendon Scholars’ Association

TikTok: @ClarendonOU

Editor: Isabel Parkinson | isabel.parkinson@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk

All Souls College, Isabel Parkinson
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.