Past Events
FROM VENICE TO VENEZUELA: UTOPIA AND ITS TRAVELS
Tickets: £8/£6/£2
Audience: open to all.
For further information and to book your ticket, please visit the website here.
STORMING UTOPIA: MAGDALEN COLLEGE SCHOOL
Tickets: £8/£6/£2
Audience: open to all.
For further information and to book your ticket, please visit the website here.
STORMING UTOPIA: ST LUKE’S CHAPEL
This event is an Oxford Public Engagement with Research and part of a Knowledge Exchange project. Organised by Professor Wes Williams (Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages) and Richard Scholar (Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages).
Thomas More’s ground-breaking island fantasy, first published in 1516, asks us all what brave new world we are to wish for. What would a society better than ours look like? Who ought to be allowed in? And on what terms? These are More’s questions in Utopia, and they have never mattered more than today, as the UK prepares to pursue a political future outside the EU and walls go up in the US. It may seem timely to return to the traditional reading of More’s text as a blueprint for political change: Utopia tells, after all, how a peninsula cut itself off from the continent to make a better future as an island… Yet the name More created for his island – Utopia – means ‘no place’: the political message of More’s text is undermined by the surrounding irony that his brave new world is a Nowhere Island.
A group of East Oxford residents have come together to develop a creative contemporary response to More’s text and Shakespeare’s Tempest in the form of a new theatrical show, Storming Utopia, which they are performing at the Pegasus Theatre in Oxford and at the Fondazione Cini in Venice in 2017. This lunchtime discussion event builds on their perspectives and on the work of two Oxford researchers – Professor Richard Scholar and Professor Wes Williams – to explore what Utopia has meant since 1516, from Venice to Venezuela and beyond, and what it might mean here in Oxford in the age of Brexit. Participants will include: researchers working on the history of Utopian literature and thought from the Renaissance to the present day; writers, directors and facilitators working in the Oxford arts scene; members of the Storming Utopia project.
Confirmed speakers: James Attlee (author of Isolarion: A Different Oxford Journey); Sara-Louise Cooper (Caribbean studies, Oxford); Euton Daley MBE (long term artistic director of Pegasus Theatre, now freelance performance poet and arts consultant) ; Erin Maglaque (History, Oxford); Angharad Arnott Philips (former Youth Arts Leader at Pegasus, now freelance theatre director ) Richard Scholar (French and comparative literature, Oxford); Wes Williams (French literature, Oxford).
The event is free and registration is required. Click here to register for your free ticket.
STORMING UTOPIA: PEGASUS THEATRE
Thursday, April 6, 2017 | 8:00pm
Seats will be available for sale on a first come, first served basis from Tuesday 28 February.
You may book additional tickets at the box office in person or by phone.
All tickets are £4 whatever age the person coming.
Audience: open to all. Tickets are needed for everyone including younger children and babies.
Call Pegasus Theatre Tuesday to Friday 11am – 6pm, Saturday 10am – 2pm on 01865 812150.
STORMING UTOPIA: PREVIEW PERFORMANCE
This event is a preview performance.
Audience: open to all.
STORMING UTOPIA: WORCESTER COLLEGE GARDENS
About the Storming Utopia Project
Part of a Knowledge Exchange Programme with the Pegasus Theatre and others within Oxford, Storming Utopia has been engaging a range of people in discussions about ideal communities, and the relation between Thomas More’s Utopia, first published 500 years ago, Shakespeare’s Tempest, and Oxford, today. The central questions we have been asking are: who owns, runs, or governs the city we live in? how do you get in, and how do you leave? do the various parts of Oxford – schools, mosques, churches, rivers, playgrounds, shopping centres, colleges… and theatres – make of our city a Utopia, or just a collection of islands? These are ancient questions, but they all still matter today. Any questions?
Email: wes.williams@seh.ox.ac.uk
STORMING UTOPIA: PEGASUS THEATRE SHOWCASE
Call the box office on 01865812150; anyone over 5 welcome.
About the Storming Utopia Project
Part of a Knowledge Exchange Programme with the Pegasus Theatre and others within Oxford, Storming Utopia has been engaging a range of people in discussions about ideal communities, and the relation between Thomas More’s Utopia, first published 500 years ago, Shakespeare’s Tempest, and Oxford, today. The central questions we have been asking are: who owns, runs, or governs the city we live in? how do you get in, and how do you leave? do the various parts of Oxford – schools, mosques, churches, rivers, playgrounds, shopping centres, colleges… and theatres – make of our city a Utopia, or just a collection of islands? These are ancient questions, but they all still matter today. Any questions?
STORMING UTOPIA: LUCY LEAVE PERFORMANCE
About the Storming Utopia Project
Part of a Knowledge Exchange Programme with the Pegasus Theatre and others within Oxford, Storming Utopia has been engaging a range of people in discussions about ideal communities, and the relation between Thomas More’s Utopia, first published 500 years ago, Shakespeare’s Tempest, and Oxford, today. The central questions we have been asking are: who owns, runs, or governs the city we live in? how do you get in, and how do you leave? do the various parts of Oxford – schools, mosques, churches, rivers, playgrounds, shopping centres, colleges… and theatres – make of our city a Utopia, or just a collection of islands? These are ancient questions, but they all still matter today. Any questions?