Thursday 6th November 2025
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Oxford University ranked second on the Soft-Power Index

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More current world leaders have studied at Oxford University than any other higher-learning institution except Harvard University, according to the latest annual Soft-Power Index published by the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) and the educational services organisation Kaplan. 

The results measure the educational soft power of different countries by counting how many monarchs, presidents, prime ministers, or similarly high-ranking government figures from other countries graduated from their higher-level education institutes. The results of the index reveal that Harvard has 15 current world leaders among its alumni, whilst Oxford has 12.

Soft power is defined as a state’s ability to influence the foreign policy of other countries through ideas and cultural influence, rather than military pressure or force. Universities influence the soft power of countries by imparting ideas and cultural knowledge. Higher education can improve a country’s global perception and partnerships, with some international students becoming advocates for their host countries after returning home. 

In response to the index, Vice-Chancellor Irene Tracey said: “That so many world leaders have studied at Oxford speaks to the transformative power of education – to shape ideas, deepen understanding, and inspire service on the global stage.”

The findings also show that five of the top six global institutions for educating world leaders in the Soft-Power Index are located in the UK. The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst educated eight world leaders, the University of Manchester educated six, the University of Cambridge educated five, and London School of Economics educated four.

In total, 59 of the 170 leaders who studied outside their home countries did so in the UK – they collectively represent over a quarter of countries across the world. These leaders include Alexander Stubb, President of Finland; Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada; Viktor Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary; Abdullah II of Jordan; and Naruhito, Emperor of Japan.

The results of the HEPI 2025 Soft-Power index suggest that the educational soft power of both the US and the UK has remained stable over the past year. In 2024, 70 current heads of state were educated in the US and 58 current heads of state were educated in the UK. However, the number educated in France has fallen from 28 to 23, whilst the number who studied in Russia has risen from 10 to 13.

The release of the 2025 Soft-Power Index follows the creation of a Soft Power Council, announced in January 2025. This is a government advisory board dedicated to promoting the UK’s economic growth and international partnerships. The Council has 26 members, including the Provost of Oriel College, Neil Mendoza CBE, and the BBC Studios CEO Tom Fussell.

Nick Hillman, the director of HEPI, welcomed both the Soft Power Council and the government’s promotion of education exports, but also said that the initiatives were “counterbalanced by the incoming levy on international students, huge dollops of negative rhetoric and excessive visa costs”.The Vice-Chancellor of Manchester University, Duncan Ivison, said that the UK has a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make the UK the global destination for the best and brightest in the world given what is happening elsewhere”.

Museum of Oxford to introduce entrance fees for first time in 50-year history

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An entrance fee will be introduced at the Museum of Oxford from January 2026, ending five decades of free admission to the local history museum.

Visitors will be charged £4 for standard admission and £2 for those who are eligible for a concession ticket, with students qualifying for the reduced rate. Free access will also be retained by children under the age of five, those receiving benefits, council employees, and Oxfordshire school-trip parties.

Annually, the number of visitors to the museum has dropped substantially from 74,000 in 2021 to 55,000 in 2024. This drop resulted in a £77,000 shortfall for the city council in the past year. The council currently subsidises the museum by almost £250,000 annually, but have agreed to reduce this to £152,000.

Councillor Alex Hollingsworth, Cabinet Member for Planning and Culture, said: “The Museum of Oxford has been very successful at the work it has done, as a place where the culture and history of this city’s people can be celebrated. However, we must not forget that the creation of its museum in its current format… was with an aspiration that it could be self-sustaining financially, and that has never been achieved.”

The proposal faced significant opposition, with more than 650 people signing a petition to keep the museum free. Oxford West and Abingdon MP Layla Moran also firmly opposed the plans.

Marta Lomza, former community engagement officer at the museum, criticised the decision at Wednesday’s council meeting. She said the proposal showed “an attitude to Oxford’s residents which can only be described as contemptuous” and included “little to no evidence, poor understanding of financial modelling, editorial errors and simply bad maths”.

A council spokesperson told Cherwell: “The charge is being used to raise funds to reduce the current subsidy that the Council gives to the Museum, from almost £250k a year to the agreed subsidy in the Council’s budget of £152k a year. This overspend by the Museum is taking away money from other potential Council services.”

The museum marks its 50th anniversary this year, and houses a large number of significant Oxford artefacts. These include a Red Cross medal that belonged to Alice Liddell, who is believed to have inspired Lewis Carroll to write the Alice in Wonderland novels, as well as St Frideswide’s grave slab. The Museum of Oxford underwent a £2.8 million refurbishment in 2021, tripling the size of its exhibition space.

Despite the controversy, the museum recently received news that they will receive a £227,952 award from the government’s Museum Renewal Fund to support ongoing operations and marketing.
Councillor Alex Hollingsworth further said the museum received only £5,000 in voluntary donations last year, far short of the quarter of a million pounds needed to run the facility. The charge will be permanent but subject to future review based on visitor numbers and income.

Police ban Oxford asylum hotel protest under public order act

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Thames Valley Police (TVP) has banned a planned anti-immigration protest and counter protest due to take place tomorrow at an Oxford hotel which houses asylum seekers. The ban is due to a football match taking place nearby.

Cherwell understands that an anti-immigration protest was planned outside the Holiday Inn Express hotel near Kassam stadium, and that a counter protest by local community groups was planned for 12:30pm. The hotel houses asylum seekers, most of whom are believed to be male.

Oxford United is due to play a home game at the Stadium tomorrow at 3pm. The police have issued a dispersal order in parts of Littlemore from 8am on Saturday to 8am on Monday, as well as imposing Public Order Act conditions which ban these protests from taking place between 12:30pm and 7pm tomorrow.

The police have the power to direct people who are, or are likely to be, engaged in anti-social behaviour away from the area covered by the dispersal order under the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act. If these individuals return to the area, they may face arrest.

A senior police officer is able to impose time restrictions on any planned protest under the Public Order Act 1986 when they believe the restrictions are necessary to prevent disorder, damage, disruption, or intimidation.

These protests come after Hadush Kebatu, a convicted sex offender from Ethiopia, was accidentally released by the Home Office instead of being deported. He was arrested by the Metropolitan Police in London on 26th October, and has since been deported back to his home country after being paid £500 by the government under the Facilitated Returns Scheme. The government has pledged to close all asylum hotels by the next general election.

Regarding the protest ban, Assistant Chief Constable Tim Metcalfe said: “Everyone has the right to protest peacefully, but we will always take appropriate steps to ensure our communities remain safe.

“We are aware of recent tensions involving anti-asylum seeker protesters and residents of the Holiday Inn hotel. We want to be clear: any criminal activity – whether from protesters or residents – will not be tolerated.”

Disclosure: the author of this article is a volunteer with a local refugee charity, Asylum Welcome.

Oxford’s Story Museum wins JM Barrie award for ‘Outstanding Achievement’

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Oxford’s Story Museum is this year’s winner of the JM Barrie Award for Outstanding Achievement, granted in recognition of their significant contribution to children’s arts and literature. 

This marks the second time that the museum has received national recognition since its reopening in 2021 and the first since it opened its new permanent gallery, The Story Arcade, earlier this year. 

The award – which this year highlights the themes of early years, the power of stories, and the ties between arts and sciences – highlights the work which the Museum has done for local schools and communities. Programmes operated by the Museum have shown the museum’s central role and value to children in Oxford. This includes the ‘Start With A Story’ Project and  2023’s ‘Everything Is Connected’, where the Museum collaborated with contemporary children’s authors to run workshops in secondary schools across Oxford. The ‘Start With A Story’ Project is partnership with Growing Minds and Donnington Doorstep, where the Museum provides children story-based learning activities in underserved areas of Oxfordshire.

This year’s awards will be presented on Thursday 6th November at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London, where CEO Conrad Bodman, Emeritus Director Tish Francis, Director Kim Pickin, and former Director Caroline Jones will attend as representatives of the Museum. 

The JM Barrie Awards are presented by the charity Action for Children’s Arts, which was founded in 1998 by Vicky Ireland MBE to raise awareness and support for the importance of children’s artistic interests and activities. Aside from running the JM Barrie Awards, the charity also runs campaigns to support childhood access to art across the country, having worked with institutions such as the National Theatre, the Victoria and Albert (V&A) Museum, and the Young Vic.

The Story Museum is located at 42 Pembroke Street, and is open from 10am to 5:30pm, seven days a week. Entry to the Museum starts at £7, or £7.70 including a donation to the Museum.

Chivalry in the age of automatic doors

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The waiter has just brought the bill, irritatingly diplomatic in his placement – middle of the table. You both glance at it, then at each other, caught in that peculiar modern standoff where nobody’s quite sure what the right move is any more. Will they think I’m old-fashioned and patronising if I offer to pay? Rude if I suggest splitting it? All the while, the nagging question lingers of whether the gesture means anything if it comes out of daddy’s Barclays Premier Current Account. So, has chivalry had its day? Or does it just look different in 2025 – a world of situationships and automatic doors?

Believed to have been coined in medieval England, stemming from the French ‘chevalerie’, the term originally referred to horse-mounted soldiers, but later became associated with the behavioural code that these knights were expected to follow. A code that encompassed loyalty, honour, and courtesy.

Taking this as the definition, I don’t think chivalry is dead, nor does it need to be. What I do think is that we’ve been approaching it all wrong. The problem isn’t that men do or don’t open doors for women, or offer to pay for dinner. The problem is that we’ve made chivalry about gender rather than kindness, about grand gestures rather than basic human decency.

True chivalry, surely, is about extending courtesy to anyone who might need it, regardless of their sex. It’s about recognising that a fellow human being is struggling with a heavy bag outside Blackwell’s and offering to help. It’s about saving someone’s seat in the Bodleian when they’ve gone to find a book. It’s about sharing your lecture notes with the person who was too ill to attend. These don’t need to be patronising acts, but simple human kindnesses that make daily life a little more bearable. Modern chivalry doesn’t need to be limited to the acts of males towards females.

Besides, modern dating practices can be more than a little confusing. How do you navigate traditional gestures of courtesy when you’ve both agreed that your relationship exists in some undefined space between friendship and romance? Does offering to pay for a meal signal an inappropriate investment in a situationship?

The truth is that some people genuinely don’t want doors held for them, meals paid for, or heavy bags carried. And that’s absolutely fine. Part of modern chivalry can be reading social cues and respecting boundaries of individuals. The key is making the offer without expecting gratitude, and accepting refusal without taking offence.

The academic pressures of Oxford life certainly don’t help. With everyone desperately clawing to stay afloat, with the weight of 900 years of academic tradition resting on our shoulders, basic consideration for others can sometimes become lost in it all. We’re so focused on our own deadlines that it can be difficult to notice the opportunities to help someone out.

The cruel irony is that this may be exactly why we need it most. In a world where we’re increasingly isolated by our phones, carefully curated social media presences, and never-ending coursework, small acts of human consideration become more valuable. A form of chivalry that has nothing to do with horse-mounted knights and everything to do with simply paying attention to the people around us.

Infrastructure can also get in the way. Every term seems to bring a fresh batch of automatic doors, rendering a door-holder-opener entirely obsolete. I have nothing against automatic doors, but there’s something vaguely melancholic about watching a steady stream of students flow through the Schwarzman Centre entrance without so much as a second of eye contact, let alone holding anything open for anyone.

I am all for a man acting courteously towards a woman – in the same way that I am all for a person acting courteously towards another person. I would hope that these acts of ‘chivalry’ are not carried out on the patronising condition that the recipient is female. So no, chivalry isn’t dead; it’s just evolved. Modern courtesy isn’t about men protecting women because they need protecting. It’s about human beings looking out for one another where we can, acknowledging our shared vulnerability and, occasionally, dependence. It’s about being the sort of person who makes other people’s lives fractionally easier, not because you want anything in return, but because kindness, as it turns out, is still worth practising. But as for restaurant bills: God knows.

Vaults and Garden Cafe to close next month after two-year legal battle

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The Vaults and Garden Cafe, a popular eatery in Radcliffe Square, is set to close in November after a lengthy legal battle. The cafe had been challenging an eviction order from the Parochial Church Council (PCC), which oversees the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, since 2023. 

After three preliminary hearings, the case was set to begin on October 28th in the High Court in London. To cover legal fees associated with the case, Vaults and Garden launched a crowdfunding appeal to raise £100,000. 

However, the appeal only raised £17,237. As a result, the cafe, which had already faced £200,000 in legal costs, opted to reach an agreement with the PCC. 

In a statement published on the crowdfunding website, Vaults and Garden wrote: “We appreciate the generosity of all 373 of you who have given help with our legal costs in our campaign to save the cafe. Some of you have given two or even three times to help, and we appreciate your concerns for us and your wish for the cafe to stay open.

“It has become apparent to us now that we are not going to raise the £100,000 target of this campaign to help with the £200,000 of legal costs that we have already incurred … Accordingly, we have taken the decision to reach an agreed settlement with the church which will allow for the orderly closure of the cafe before the end of the year.” 

The Vaults and Garden Cafe, which employs roughly 60 people, will have been in continuous operation for 22 years before its closure next month. The cafe had partnered with events such as the Oxford Literary Festival and the Oxford Chamber Music Festival. More than 15,500 people signed an online petition to save the cafe.

The PCC had originally authorised the eviction order to “reduce energy usage, improve accessibility, enhance security, and ensure that the Grade 1 building is fit to welcome all visitors”. In addition, the PCC announced plans to reopen the site as a new cafe – a social enterprise offering “affordable” pricing and additional “employment opportunities for underrepresented people”. 

In a joint press release, Vaults and Garden and the PCC confirmed an agreement had been reached where “all parties are happy”. The statement explained that Vaults and Garden’s parent company will continue to operate their other venues, while PCC will “carry out urgent repairs” before reopening the new cafe “in the course of the next 18 months”.

We must fight the Right’s narrative about Oxford

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Oxford has gone woke, apparently. This once-venerable institution has been dumbed down to a shadow of its former self, a place where debate is stifled, academic rigour has vanished, and diversity trumps diligence. Lee Cohen, a journalist for GB News (now Britain’s most-watched news channel) recently asserted that all this points to “a deeper malaise afflicting Britain’s elite institutions”. As current students here, we must be very frightened indeed. 

Given their emphasis on Oxford’s declining intellectual credentials, the extent of the Right’s fallacy is remarkable. The erroneous inference from part (the Oxford Union, for example) to whole (the University) is glaring. Failing actual empirical research, a few controversial examples are handpicked to bolster the narrative that the oldest university in the English-speaking world has been subject to ideological capture and irreversible decline. 

This is obviously false. Anyone on the ground here knows that Oxford remains a thriving community of scholars: not only the best university in the world, but 4th in the UK! The majority of Oxford students, who don’t read The Telegraph or watch GB News, are unaware their institution is supposed to have fallen into disarray. But such outlets have large followings, and despite the risk of preaching to the choir, it needs to be said: Oxford is still brilliant

A few Oxford stories have recently exploded across national and international media. The most prominent among them concerns George Abaraonye, the Union President-Elect fighting to stay in the role following highly controversial comments about the shooting of far-right influencer Charlie Kirk. Horrible though these comments were, the media frenzy that ensued reached a whole new fever pitch precisely because it fits the narrative that Oxford has gone to the dogs. Particular attention has been paid to Abaraonye’s A-level results, with the implicit message that Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) initiatives were somehow responsible for this mess. 

The logical leap from the faults of one student to the failure of an entire recruitment strategy wouldn’t survive under the scrutiny of an Oxford tutor, but the perpetual moral outrage it engenders does help sell newspapers and drive clicks. When a privately-educated Union president makes a mistake of similarly stupid proportions in future, the press will surely jump to the conclusion that the massive overrepresentation of students from fee-paying schools is the root cause. 

Other recent flashpoints include plans to use gender-inclusive Latin in graduation ceremonies, claims about non-exam assessment methods being expanded to help minorities, and “social engineering” over black students’ A-levels. All from one newspaper in particular, whose strapline is “we speak your mind”. 

‘Mind’ is right, as whatever the claims, they certainly require an active imagination. Go and see students toiling away on their essays in the brand-new Schwarzman Centre to see if they’re lazy, easily offended, incapable of sitting exams, or idiots brought in to satisfy a diversity quota. It’s evident the University’s exam system is alive and kicking. As are initiatives to get more students to Oxford from deprived (and so often more ethnically diverse) areas, ensuring we get the best talent from everywhere, not just the usual private schools and premium-postcode London grammar Oxbridge factories. 

As for the hysteria about ceremonial Latin: at Oxford nowadays, we tend to focus on substance over style. Most of us don’t wake up every day in consternation at the fact some words have been changed from a future graduation ceremony. We get on with the business of study, which ironically enough doesn’t hold much currency in the right-wing media attention economy. 

Obviously, protests from Oxford students against Israel’s genocide in Gaza have fed the narrative too. Apparently a student body that opposes the murder of innocent civilians, as well as the destruction of universities, has profoundly lost its way. Many are also extremely uneasy with the proscription of direct action protest groups as terrorist organisations. To represent progressives’ opposition as intellectual vacuity or moral ruin is to engage in precisely the Orwellian doublespeak that the Right is obsessed with attributing to the ‘woke agenda’. It’s shameful.

All this overtly partisan talk of ‘woke’ might feel very old-fashioned and the rebuttal of the nonsense spouted about this University and its students futile. Yet the stakes are too high for us to sit back and watch our best universities slide into the same category as the BBC: institutional cornerstones sitting on the brink after decades of right-wing slings and arrows. A future Farage government will not be kind to Oxford, just as Trump has not been kind to American higher education

What’s more, this presentation of Oxford is a major distraction from the many pressing questions the University is actually facing. The more national outlets parrot Union gossip, snap merry ballgoers, or criticise ‘woke’ window dressing policies, the less we talk about the institutional embrace of ChatGPT, the abysmal pay faced by early career academics forced to turn to food banks, or how to secure funding for the humanities. All fall by the wayside if the British popular perception of the jewel in our education crown is anchored in  meaningless culture war debates.


Oxford is alive and well, whatever the media might say. Anti-intellectualism may be on the rise, but we must look through the click-bait, fear-mongering, rage-baiting mist and see the wood for the trees. Don’t change. The day this University caves to the caprices of a populist press is the day we are truly in trouble. 

Crown Estate acquires 221-acre site for development in south Oxford

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The Crown Estate, the property company that manages the British monarchy’s lands and holdings, announced last Tuesday that it had acquired a 221-acre site next to the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, about 25 kilometres south of Oxford. The Crown Estate projects the site will be worth £4.5 billion, generate 30,000 jobs nationally, and build as many as 400 homes.

The investment is being made as part of the Estate’s commitment to invest £1.5 billion into science, innovation, and technology. The Chief Executive of the Crown Estate, Dan Labbad, said: “The ambition of Harwell East is to create a space for great science to flourish.” He noted that the “acquisition marks the latest step in our journey to support the UK’s fast-growing sectors”.

The Science Minister Lord Vallance said that the “vast economic potential of the site underlines precisely why we are determined to fully unlock the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor”. The announcement follows the plans unveiled earlier this year by Chancellor Rachel Reeves for major investments in infrastructure, technology, and research in the Oxford-Cambridge Arc.

As a company sitting between private and public ownership, the Crown Estate sees most of its income go to the HM Treasury, and closely cooperates with government-led schemes to increase investment. Profits made by the company are partly used to fund King Charles III’s work and initiatives. Reeves’s expected announcement of £10 billion of private investment into the UK will include the Crown Estate’s Harwell East science park.

The Harwell Science and Innovation Campus was itself formed as part of the government initiative in 2006, and has offices and laboratories for organisations working in biotech, energy, and battery systems, and both the European and UK space agencies. The announced investment would mark a major expansion of the campus, which has seen high demand for lab and office space.

The Crown Estate has other significant ongoing investments in Oxfordshire. Last year, the company became a partner in a £125 million project to transform the shuttered Debenhams store in Oxford city centre into laboratory space, alongside Oxford Science Enterprises and Pioneer Group. The Harwell East site will join the Debenhams redevelopment, the new Oxford life sciences hub, the Oxford North innovation district, and the Oxford Science Park as part of the general expansion of sciences and research funding.

Plaques and Peripheries: The Search for Oxford’s Women Writers

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Every morning on my way to college, I pass through the cobblestoned, crowded St Mary’s Passage, overhearing stories of Oxford’s most famous literary duo, C.S Lewis and J.R.R Tolkien. It begins with the famed ‘Narnia’ door, said to have inspired Lewis’s magical wardrobe, followed by the soaring spires of All Souls College, the apparent influence behind Tolkien’s The Two Towers. Both men are woven inextricably into Oxford’s cultural and physical landscape. From parks, nature reserves, and pubs, to walking tours and guided museum visits: their presence is permanent and pervasive.

Other Oxford authors are similarly memorialised. In the dining hall of my own college, Brasenose, I eat my hash browns and baked beans beneath the gaze of Nobel Laureate William Golding. Outside, Lewis Carroll enthusiasts tour past the sign on Folly Bridge to the Perch in Port Meadow and the iconic Alice gift shop. And as I walk through the majestic grounds of the deer park, it is hard not to recall Oscar Wilde’s Magdalen Walks, written during his years of study here. 

And yet, the conspicuous absence of women writers in the everyday geography of Oxford lingers. This year, I attended a creative writing seminar organised by the Careers Service, where the audience was asked to name authors from Oxford, and the room was buzzing with answers. No women authors were named. Visibility in public spaces shapes public memory, and Tolkien, C S Lewis, and Lewis Carroll enjoy an extended literary afterlife that has not been granted to the city’s women writers. The question persists: why are they missing from the town’s everyday lore and landmarks? 

The simple answer is, of course, that women were only recently admitted to the University. The other common answer is that the male writers are ‘more famous’. But literary fame, as we know, is hardly ever neutral and is pervasively shaped by class, race, gender, and access to cultural capital. From their exclusion from university spaces, powerfully addressed in Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, to their marginalisation by critical scholarship until well into the 20th century, women have been systematically written out of Oxford’s cultural memory.

And if conditions for creative production were systematically denied to women within the lecture rooms and dining halls of colleges, the extended geography of the city, comprising pubs, taverns, and salons, accentuates this academic exclusion. The latter are sites of intellectual rendezvous and cerebral fraternising; the catalyst behind male scholarly camaraderie. Graham Greene spent his student days at the Lamb and Flag, the pub across from the Tolkien-Lewis haunt, Eagle and Child. Evelyn Waugh, whose novels draw from his days at Oxford, regularly drank at the Abingdon Arms, and spent his student years at the Oxford Union, drawing on his experiences at the Union in Brideshead Revisited. When he was a member, the Union had yet to open its doors for women, who were only admitted in 1963 after multiple failed motions in the previous decades.

Even celebrated men did not all have homogeneous access to power or cultural acceptance in Oxford. William Golding never felt a sense of belonging here, owing to his working-class background. Percy Bysshe Shelley was expelled from University College for his radical pamphlet defending atheism. Oscar Wilde was persecuted for his homosexuality and eventually imprisoned. However, individual hardships notwithstanding, they still moved through spaces that systematically excluded women. They could write in pubs and inns, mingle in debating circuits, hold fellowships, and return as commemorated alumni. Their gender afforded them access to an intellectual and cultural life that allowed for rebellion and resistance to be enacted within the very spaces that may have felt repressive. 

While men are remembered in colleges, parks, and pubs – the visibly celebrated spaces – women tend to appear in the margins. Opposite the grand gates of historic Christ Church College lies the narrow, honey-coloured Brewer Street, where Dorothy Sayers once lived. Only a plaque by a blue door informs the passerby that she was a resident here. Iris Murdoch lived farther away, in Summertown, a residential part of the city. The commemorative plaque is obscured by an overgrown hedge, perhaps reiterating a metaphorical effacement. Somewhere between these two lies the cream-coloured house of philosopher and friend of Murdoch’s, Philippa Foot, located among a row of otherwise indistinguishable homes. 

Not only are women’s absences striking, but also the ways their presence is actively recorded. The shared commemorative plaque for scholarly siblings Clara and Walter Pater is an example. It reads: “Clara Pater, pioneer of women’s education, and Walter Pater, author and scholar.” Both lived and worked in Oxford as scholars. Clara taught Latin, Greek and German, but their shared memory nonetheless enforces a subtle hierarchy. 

And then there are the ‘muses’, the women who inspired the creative and artistic output of men whilst remaining underwritten in the city’s history. The presence of Jane Burden, Pre-Raphaelite muse to Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the wife of William Morris, is marked by a plaque, tucked away in St Helen’s Passage. Alice Liddell, the real-life Alice of Wonderland fame, lives on through Carroll’s stories, but also in the physical geography of Oxford: a wooden door depicting the patron saint of Oxford, Frideswide, placed at a Church quite out of sight in Botley, is said to have been carved by Alice. 

If there are muses whom we recollect through male association, there are women who cannot be traced at all. Their presence in the city was liminal and remains undocumented, their access to intellectual life filtered through the domestic sphere. One of the earliest such women is Alicia D’Anvers. The daughter of a ‘beadle of civil law’ and first chief printer of the University, Samuel Clarke, she penned satirical verse about Oxford colleges and condescending scholars in her Academia, or, The Humours of the University of Oxford (1691).

Inside Oxford’s former women’s colleges, the traces are more deliberate and thoughtful. Somerville College takes pride in celebrating the women associated with it and is the only college with women’s portraits adorning its hall and chapel, Dorothy Sayers and Vera Brittain among them. Not too far from Somerville, at St Anne’s College, one can find a portrait of Iris Murdoch. It stands in sharp contrast to the gilded-framed, baroque paintings of Oxonian males in decorated uniforms. Painted by Marie-Louise von Motesiczky, Murdoch sits pensively on a chair in a compact room. The loose, partly impressionistic brush strokes, the muted colours and the undistinguished backdrop: all convey a sense of quiet introspection and even disorderliness. 

Catalysed by her visit to Cambridge in 1928, Woolf wrote in A Room of One’s Own: “Lock up your libraries if you like; but there is no gate, no lock, no bolt that you can set upon the freedom of my mind.” We find evidence that the city indeed equally belongs to women who, even when access to the University was denied, formed an integral part of its literary legacy: what remains and is passed down to us are scattered traces, often found in the quieter corners of Oxford. They reveal a parallel literary history, one built not for celebration and visibility, but to be experienced in quieter streets, uncelebrated houses, and modest plaques. 

Kathleen Stock amongst speakers delivering Oakeshott Lectures

Kathleen Stock, Sir Noel Malcom, John Gray, and Curtis Yarvin delivered the Oakeshott Lectures, formerly known as Scruton Lectures, in Oxford this month. The lecture series, established in 2021, states that its aims are to “keep thoughtful conservatism alive”. Previous speakers have included Peter Thiel, Douglas Murray, and Katherine Birbalsingh.

The lectures, free to attend and hosted in the Sheldonian Theatre, bring together academics, writers, and public thinkers to discuss ideas in the tradition of conservative political philosophy. A corresponding YouTube channel makes past and current lectures accessible to an online audience. The talks are not officially affiliated with the University, and the Sheldonian Theatre is rented out privately in order to host them.

The series is named after Michael Oakeshott, the conservative philosopher. Its previous name memorialised Roger Scruton, another conservative philosopher. ConservativeHome reported that the name was changed following “a request from the Roger Scruton Legacy Foundation”. The Foundation only lists the lectures which were given under the old name on its “Events” page. It is unclear whether they continued as the organisers of the lectures following the change. 

The philosopher Kathleen Stock gave a lecture about assisted dying on Monday 20th October. Introduced as an emblem of “safety in public life”, Stock’s talk was titled “Against the Organisation of Assisted Death”.

Stock focused on the moral question of mercy, askeing whether assisted suicide is genuinely merciful in practice. She argued that, in countries where euthanasia has been legalised, the process has shifted from personalised doctor-patient relationships, where “the doctor knew the person very well”, to a more bureaucratic, impersonal system.

The former philosophy professor challenged the eligibility criteria often emphasised in assisted-death legislation: that one must have a terminal diagnosis of six months or less, be confirmed by two doctors, not be coerced, and be mentally capable. She warned that even with those safeguards, hidden forms of coercion may infiltrate the system.

Stock questioned why those whose role it is to save lives should ever be the ones deciding to end them. She also expressed a fear that in time people will feel compelled, implicitly or explicitly, to choose assisted death, especially if cost-benefit arguments or resource constraints come into play. Stock contended that the long-term costs (ethical, social, emotional) may well outweigh the benefits that are currently emphasised.

Stock’s talk proceeded without disruption, in contrast to her last public event in Oxford. Her 2023 appearance at the Oxford Union was interrupted by a protester who glued themself to the floor, in opposition to Stock’s ‘gender-critical’ views on transgender people. Her 2023 appearance also sparked large protests, including chants of “Terf lies cost lives”.

Stock’s lecture was followed by Curtis Yarvin, who gave a lecture in support of monarchism on Wednesday 23rd October. Titled “The End of the End of History”, Yarvin contended that liberal democracy contained two contradictory impulses, towards meritocracy and populism respectively. The American blogger, who has been described as “the philosopher behind JD Vance”, recommended instead a “new Platonic guardian class” to govern society, inspired by a form of “accountable monarchy” he identifies in corporate leadership structures.

The talk included an extended discussion of the “lab leak” theory for the COVID-19 pandemic. Yarvin argued that this theory, which remains contested, is evidence of the failure of “normal science”, and therefore of meritocracy. In contrast, as an argument against populism, Yarvin referenced a famous New Yorker cartoon which depicts an airline passenger shouting: “These smug pilots have lost touch with regular passengers like us. Who thinks I should fly the plane?”

Yarvin, widely described as “reactionary” and “alt-right”, is a controversial figure known for his incendiary statements. During the talk, Yarvin described himself as a “Trumptard”, and appeared to make a joking reference to Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist killed in Saudi Arabia’s Turkish consulate in 2018.

All talks were followed by onstage discussions. Stock was joined by the Oxford theologian and House of Lords peer, Nigel Biggar. Yarvin debated the historian David Starkey, who delivered an Oakeshott lecture in 2024. Noel Malcom was joined by Lord Dan Hannan on the subject of human rights, whilst John Gray had a discussion with History Professor Robert Tombs on the English revolutionary tradition. 

The University declined to comment. The Scruton Foundation did not respond to a request for comment.