Fri 10 November 2023 | 12:00AM |
![]() Participate in behavioural research at Cambridge Judge Business School Become a member of our participant pool, support academic research and get paid for it (£10/hour). There is no need to be a student or affiliated with the University of Cambridge. |
9:00AM - 6:30PM |
![]() Highlight Spitting Image: A Controversial History Savage, grotesque, hilarious: explore Spitting Image, the puppet show that became an icon of 20th century television, with Cambridge University Library's current exhibition. |
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9:00AM - 7:00PM |
![]() The Anxiety of Interdisciplinarity 2.0 An exhibition of 40+ contemporary artists exploring the terrain of anxiety or uncomfortable ‘between-ness’. |
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10:00AM - 5:00PM |
![]() Beneath Our Feet: Archaeology of the Cambridge Region A new exhibition at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology explores the traces of where people have lived, worked and died for thousands of years in Cambridgeshire. |
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10:00AM - 5:00PM |
![]() Highlight Black Atlantic: Power, People, Resistance Which stories get remembered, and why? This exhibition explores some new stories from history – stories that help us to separate fact from fiction and history from myth. |
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10:00AM - 5:00PM |
![]() An exhibition of student art |
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10:00AM - 5:00PM |
![]() Highlight Real Families: Stories of Change Bringing together more than 120 artworks spanning painting, photography, sculpture and film, 'Real Families: Stories of Change' asks us to consider what makes a family today, and the impact our families have on us, through the eyes of contemporary artists |
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10:00AM - 6:00PM |
![]() Highlight Women & Water Our exhibition Women & Water explores the relationship between women and water in the works of 17 women artists, spanning from the early twentieth century to the present day. The exhibition examines how water has been used by artists both as subject matter and artistic medium to reflect the multiplicity of women’s experiences. |
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11:00AM - 12:00PM |
![]() A tour of the Pepys Library with Dr Jane Hughes, Pepys Librarian and Fellow of Magdalene College. |
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1:15PM - 2:00PM |
The Pitt-Rivers Archaeological Science Seminars are a relatively informal and highly dynamic venue for archaeological scientists of all kinds who share their research as it happens – often, before it has made it to publications. Our speakers include researchers based in or around Cambridge as well as visitors from around the world. |
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2:00PM - 4:00PM |
![]() Highlight The Betty Behrens Seminar on Classics of Historiography June Purvis (University of Portsmouth) will speak about Sylvia Pankhurst ‘s The Suffragette Movement (1931) and Christabel Pankhurst ‘s Unshackled (1959) and engage in discussion with the attendees. |
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5:00PM - 6:30PM |
Highlight Annual Marshall Lecture by Prof. Charles Manski Lecture 1 Credible Social Planning under Uncertainty This is the Faculty of Economics annual Marshall Lecture, two lectures will be given by Prof. Charles Manski, Department of Economics and Institute for Policy Research Northwestern University |
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5:30PM - 7:00PM |
![]() Lies, Spies and Double-Dealing: A Cambridge Spy Tour A walking tour which unmasks the long tradition of Cambridge spying, from the earliest days of the university to recent times; from Christopher Marlowe to Anthony Blunt, via James Bond. Tours are led by Green Badge Guides. |
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5:45PM - 7:15PM |
![]() Charting the Course: Neglected Tropical Diseases, Global Health Leadership, and the Wider Agenda What are the challenges of neglected tropical diseases and how can public health leaders address these across the globe? |
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6:30PM - 7:30PM |
![]() Cambridge guides' scariest storytellers take you to the darker byways of our city, where the spirits of the dead still hover ... |
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7:30PM - 8:45PM |
![]() John Bercow: Speaking for change Go behind the scenes of Parliament with controversial former Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow. |