This summer programme is an excellent opportunity for university undergraduates to earn credits to transfer to their home degree.  
		What better way to improve your grades and advance in your studies than to take courses in the city of Oxford.  Students can choose 
		to take either one or two courses, earning 3 or 6 credits.
		
		Follow this link to 
apply online today. 
		Contact us for more detailed information about the programme or any questions you may have about enrolment.  Email 
		
manuela.williams@stclares.ac.uk or call +44 1865 517707.
		
		The subjects we offer during the 4 week programme are listed below.  Take a look at the course summaries and make your choice.
		
		
		This course is designed to give students an opportunity to explore the direction and nature of change in the built environment of 
		Oxford, a city famed for its architectural beauty and history.  There is a continuous tradition of civic, ecclesiastical and 
		collegiate architecture spanning almost a thousand years. This is the background to any proposed conservation or change in the 
		city.  The topics to be explored include the range of period styles and diversity of building types to be found in the city. 
		From these students will focus in on a particular architect, building, collection, or individual work of art for further 
		independent study in greater depth.
		
		
		This course will focus primarily on the Pre-Raphaelite Movement, founded by a group of English artists in 1848, which at every 
		point is closely connected with Oxford. The course focuses on the many connections between development of the Pre-Raphaelite 
		movement and Oxford. We will view many examples of art and design associated with the major contributors to the Pre-Raphaelite 
		movement, including works by William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones and William Holman Hunt in a variety of media from paintings 
		and murals to stained glass and tapestry.  The course will make full use of the resources of the Ashmolean Museum and field 
		trips to Oxford University buildings and colleges which include Pre-Raphaelite work, such as the Oxford Union,  Exeter 
		College and Christ Church College.  The course will also seek to make connections with the literature, architecture and 
		history of Victorian England and the resurgence of interest in the Middle Ages and the ‘Gothic' which the Pre-Raphaelites 
		painted in such vivid colours.
		
		
United Crowns - Divided Kingdoms: England, Scotland and Ireland in the 17th Century  (history, 3 credits)
		The Seventeenth Century was one of the most turbulent periods experienced by the peoples of the British Isles since the 
		Norman Conquest. This course will consider the profound influence that the various monarchs and leaders had on the three 
		kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland, and assess their impact from political, social and cultural aspects.
		
		
		This interdisciplinary, study abroad course will approach the question of what is political philosophy through the question of ethics and 
		rhetoric, examining contemporary and early and late modern alternatives, the former represented by Fish and Rorty, the latter by 
		Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Burke, and Shakespeare. Each of these thinkers is wrestling with such themes as, what would a world that is 
		just and merciful look like? What are the philosophical foundations for the best political community that seeks to achieve peace and 
		civil harmony? Is such a world possible? The city of Oxford shall serve as our setting for 
		study of the most interesting philosophical debates in modern philosophy. Students will gain insight into not only Oxford's 
		rich past but also some of England's greatest philosophers and literary geniuses.
		
		
		This course aims to give students a stimulating introduction to the major religions of Asia, focusing on Hinduism, Buddhism 
		and Taoism, and also exploring Shinto and Confucian traditions. The Indian and East Asian views of the cosmos have shaped 
		the lives of half the globe, and continue to have an increasing influence on Western culture. We will look at the philosophy 
		of reincarnation and liberation, and the arts and rituals of Hinduism and Buddhism. We will go on to see how the movement 
		of Buddhism into South and East Asia blended Indian influences with Taoist, Confucian and Shinto traditions to create profound 
		new approaches to life. Our approach will show how key philosophical ideas give rise to the beliefs and practices that 
		shape people's lives today.
		
		
		The aim of this course is to introduce students to the plays of Shakespeare, giving a survey of his development as a 
		playwright in terms of both the written text and stagecraft. Students will be encouraged to assess Shakespeare's continuing 
		cultural relevance from within a supportive critical environment. As part of this course, students will have the opportunity 
		to attend a number of Shakespearean plays.
		
		
		Some of England's greatest writers have lived and studied in Oxford, and many have set their works of literature in the city 
		and the university. This seminar will examine several Oxford novels with special reference to the influence of setting on 
		character and plot. Among the works to be considered are:  Jude the Obscure, by Thomas 
		Hardy; Brideshead Revisited, by Evelyn Waugh; Jill, by Philip Larkin and The Dead of Jericho, by Colin Dexter as well as a 
		selection of Oxford poems.  Field trips to the actual settings of the works will be a regular feature of the course, and day 
		trips to London and other sites are planned.