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The Wykeham's Culture Desk - June 2026
Welcome to the Wykeham’s Culture Desk. In this new series – released once a month – we recommend one book, one poem, one podcast, and one exhibition or event for our culturally curious readers. Ou...
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Oxford's Best Writing Spots – Part I
Oxford has always harboured deep literary associations. Now the home of Wykeham’s Journals, we are proud to situate ourselves within the city’s long lineage of literature lovers. From Matthew Arno...
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Right On Cue: Laughter & Diplomacy In Congress
Whatever you think of King Charles’s speech at Congress, it was a masterclass in timing. He has received criticism for remaining overly-cooperative. Some saw this as a missed opportunity to make a...
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“Few die well that die in a battle” | Henry V Review
I realise, as I finally sat down to write this, that I’d been putting it off. When approaching Shakespeare, I’ve always been on the deferential side. Knowing a lot about Shakespeare is not a clai...
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There is a particular kind of light that exists for about twenty minutes after sunrise. It arrives low and unhurried, moving across surfaces at an angle that ordinary daylight never finds. It catc...
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Phone vs. Pen: a zero-sum game?
A common complaint made against pen and paper is that they are less ‘efficient’ than phones. In the eyes of many they are anachronistic forebears of the devices which now do it all for us. The gen...
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I hadn’t expected to come across Don McCullin on a farm in Somerset. I was on holiday to escape from things; nothing in particular, just the responsibility and concomitant stress of the everyday. ...
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Wykehams Buchclub – Mihail Sebastian, Frauen (1933)
Diese Woche besprechen wir „Frauen“ von Mihail Sebastian. Diese erstmals 1933 erschienene Novelle ist eine verführerische, berauschende und bisweilen beunruhigende Erzählung. Sie erkundet d...
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Wykehams Buchclub – Zadie Smith, Intimations: Sechs Essays (2020)
Buchclub, 17. April: Das Buch dieser Woche heißt „Intimations“ von Zadie Smith. Der Untertitel „Sechs Essays“ lässt nicht auf die emotionale Großzügigkeit der Sammlung schließen. Ebens...
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