Finch Ward
JCR Welfare OfficerCarina Chan
JCR SecretaryRebecca Schleuss
MCR House ChairHi, I’m Rebecca the MCR House Chair. I’m responsible for the MCR space and its amenities (such as the air mattress lending scheme), together with providing biscuits and tea. I hope to green up the space a little and am always happy to hear suggestions how we could contribute to your wellbeing in the MCR! Otherwise I am a DPhil student in Medieval German, researching healthcare in medieval German convents. I like to go on long rambling walks, have a (supposedly) questionable obsession with peanut butter, and enjoy meeting friends and new people for shared food and nature excursions!
Tara Tamang
Social SecretaryOriginally from a Franco-Nepali background, I spent my formative years moving between Nepal and France, an experience that sparked my passion for global politics and cross-cultural understanding. This unique upbringing, paired with my multilingualism in French, Nepali, English, and Spanish, has driven my academic focus on migration, identity, and human rights. After earning a BA in International Politics and French in Paris and gaining hands-on experience in refugee support work in Greece, I am now pursuing an MSc in Refugee and Forced Migration Studies at the University of Oxford. My long-term aim is to contribute to inclusive migration policy and advocacy through research and collaboration with international organizations. Being the Social Secretary of the Somerville MCR is one of the most fulfilling parts of my time at Oxford. I love bringing people together in creative, welcoming, and meaningful ways, whether through formals, brunches, film nights, or cultural celebrations. It’s a joy to help cultivate a strong sense of community, especially in a graduate environment that can often feel academically intense. Creating spaces where students can relax, share laughs, and feel at home has shown me the value of connection, and I’m proud to be part of a team that makes Somerville such a warm and vibrant place to be.
Harry Woodfin
MCR SecretaryHello, my name is Harry and I’m the MCR Secretary. I’m a first year DPhil in Engineering Science, studying how Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOF) can improve electrical output from Triboelectric nanogenerators (TENG), for net-zero sensing and energy harvesting applications. As MCR Secretary, I’m on hand to help out with the MCR administration tasks, alongside organising general meetings and the mailing list. Please feel free to reach out for any questions or queries about the MCR.
Sanjana Choudhary
Library & Education RepHello there! My name is Sanjana Choudhary and I am reading for a Master’s in Modern South Asian Studies as an OICSD scholar. My research tackles colonial censorship of Indian magazines and banned literature in the 20th century. I am a writer and journalist, which makes me naturally passionate about the workings of the library and academia. As your Library & Education Rep, I will be coordinating as a bridge between the Education Committee of the College and the graduate academic community (MCR). I will also be organising the MCR research symposium for interested members. Feel free to reach out to me with any academic or library related concerns, suggestions and feedback! I can be reached out at sanjana.choudhary@some.ox.ac.uk anytime!
Zoya Yasmine
IT OfficerI am a DPhil student in the Faculty of Law. My research explores the intersections between intellectual property, medical AI, data protection, and ethics. I grew up in Wales and in my spare time I enjoy playing tennis, puzzling, and watching TV (mostly Dragon’s Den and Made in Chelsea). As IT Officer, I’ll be helping to set up and maintain the MCR website, making it a useful resource for everyone in the college community. If you ever spot anything on the site that needs fixing or if you have ideas for improvements, feel free to get in touch!
Narhitya Nawal
Programme Administrator, Oxford India Centre for Sustainable DevelopmentNarhitya is currently the Programme Administrator with the OICSD. She supports the Centre’s work on scholarships, events, and strategic partnerships, and serves as the administrator of the Schmidt AI in Science Faculty Fellowship Programme.
Narhitya holds a Master’s degree in Modern South Asian Studies from the University of Oxford and a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature from Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. She also received a special mention in the British Association for South Asian Studies (BASAS) Master’s Dissertation Prize 2024 for her master’s thesis at Oxford.
Narhitya’s work is animated by a deep interest in feminist political philosophy and literature, particularly in how knowledge structures are created, legitimised, and contested. She has previously worked at the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) in India where she contributed to research and policy discourse on gender, development, and international relations. She also served as a Research Intern with the United Nations, contributing to a large-scale “Sports for Peace” programme in Central Africa. Additionally, she also interned at Teach for India, where she designed culturally responsive curricula and facilitated English and social-emotional learning sessions.
She is also the co-founder of Adira, a grassroots non-profit initiative based out of Allahabad, India, to support marginalised women through education, capacity-building, and livelihoods training. Her dedication to building inclusive and equitable academic and professional spaces informs her work at OICSD, especially in advancing women’s leadership and socially engaged scholarship.
Anne Makena
Honorary FellowDr Anne Makena (2012, DPhil Chemical Biology) is Co-Director of the Africa Oxford Initiative (AfOx), a vibrant platform for all things Africa at Oxford.
The goal of Dr Makena and her AfOx colleagues is to make Africa a strategic priority for the University of Oxford by facilitating equitable, sustainable and impactful collaborations between Oxford and African institutions.
Working with partners across 30 African countries, AfOx facilitates academic and research partnerships by supporting activities including a travel grant scheme, visiting fellowships for African academics, high quality research engagement meetings and financial, academic and mentorship support for African students and research staff in Oxford. AfOx has an ambitious, but justified, aim to increase the number of African graduates at Oxford from 3 to 10%.
Dr Makena is responsible for developing and implementing AfOx’s overall strategy, as well as leading on fundraising and stakeholder engagement, and supporting the delivery of core AfOx programmes. Under Dr Makena’s guidance, AfOx is making strides to support the creation of a culture-shifting cohort of emerging African leaders whose experiences and passion can be practically addresses to some of the most pressing challenges in Africa, recognising moreover that Africa is the most rapidly changing continent whose future demographic and economic growth will have a major influence globally.
Dr Makena holds a DPhil in Chemical Biology from the University of Oxford and an Executive MBA from the Said Business School. She was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College in June 2025.
Emma Smith
Honorary FellowProfessor Emma Smith (1988, English) is an internationally renowned Shakespeare scholar and current Professor of Shakespeare Studies at the University of Oxford.
Professor Smith’s work explores the influence of Shakespeare on stage, print, and in wider culture. She has written on Shakespeare’s First Folio (1623) – the first collected edition of his plays – and is interested in how Shakespeare came to be so important.
An associate scholar of the Royal Shakespeare Company, Professor Smith is also a regular speaker in schools, literary festivals, theatres, libraries, and book groups, as well as in universities. She has extensive experience of both print and broadcast media, including on BBC Radio 3 and 4 and BBC News, as well as authoring articles for The New York Times, The Telegraph, The Observer and The Guardian.
Professor Smith’s recent publications showcase her ability to combine forensic close-textual reading with sweeping surveys of the reception given to Shakespeare in performance, print, and criticism. Her 2019 book This Is Shakespeare was a Sunday Times bestseller and her 2022 book Portable Magic: A History of Books and their Readers was shortlisted for the Wolfson Prize.
Professor Smith has worked with theatre companies including the Royal Shakespeare Company, National Theatre and Donmar Warehouse. In 2023, she was the Sam Wanamaker Fellow at Shakespeare’s Globe, and she has served as a consultant for TV and film, including Josie Rourke’s Mary Queen of Scots, and the BBC series ‘Shakespeare: Rise of a Genius’ (2023).
Professor Smith’s next full-length work, The First Elizabethans, is a study on Elizabethan artistic culture from architecture to music to gardens to fashion, and will be published by Penguin in 2026.
Professor Emma Smith lives in Oxford with her partner Elizabeth. She was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College in June 2025.
Kamila Hawthorne
Honorary FellowProfessor Kamila Hawthorne MBE (née Ebrahim, 1978, Medicine) is Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners. She was elected in 2022, becoming the fifth woman to hold the position.
Professor Hawthorne has been a GP for 37 years, with 30 of them spent working in South Wales. She qualified from Somerville College, Oxford, in 1984, and completed her GP training in Nottingham in 1988. Kamila was Head of the Graduate Entry Medicine Programme at Swansea University and is on the Trustee Boards of the Kings Fund, and Cardiff Women’s Aid. She is also a Bevan Commissioner and a Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales.
Kamila has a deep interest in medical education, and believes passionately in the importance of training excellent, caring and inclusive GPs for a global society. She is passionate about the role of GPs in patient care and as advocates for patients.
Her research and clinical working interests have been in health inequalities and access to health services, (her MD was based on working with BAME patient groups with Type 2 diabetes in Nottingham, Manchester and Cardiff). With wide experience of general practice and running community projects in diabetes and heart disease, she has been named ‘GP of the Year’ twice and was awarded an MBE in 2017 for services to General Practice.
The RCGP is the UK’s largest medical college, with over 50,000 members. It represents and supports GPs on key issues including licensing, education, training, research and clinical standards. The RCGP has both a President and a Chair, but the former is a mainly ceremonial role. As Chair, Professor Hawthorne sets the college’s policy direction, and leads the RCGP decision making body.
Professor Hawthorne was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville in June 2025.
Patricia Davies
Honorary FellowPat Davies (née Owtram) is a WWII codebreaker and recipient of the Legion d’Honneur who smashed glass ceilings as a producer in the world of Sixties television. She describes herself today as the only 100-year-old woman in Chiswick who knows how to use a sten gun.
Like many women of her generation, Pat was determined to contribute to the war effort during WWII. Quite unlike most other women, however, Pat Davies spent her war years conducting vital secret work at covert listening stations on the South Coast, for which she would later receive the Légion d’Honneur, France’s highest order of merit.
Pat joined the WRNS in 1942, aged just 18, motivated by her father’s capture and internment by the Japanese army. As a German-speaker, she was selected for work manning wireless intercept stations around the coast. Her intercepts of German military communications were translated, with encoded messages sent to Bletchley Park. After the war’s conclusion, Pat was offered a role as a translator in the Nuremburg Trials, but chose to return home to care for her recently liberated father. Unbeknownst to Pat, her younger sister Jean Argles (née Owtram) had also worked as a codebreaker for SOE, decoding messages from agents in the field. The sisters only learned about their shared experiences after the war, leading them to write the popular memoir ‘Code-Breaking Sisters’.
After the war, Pat became a noted television producer, helping to devise several longstanding shows including The Sky At Night, University Challenge and Coronation Street. More recently, Pat won a seven-decade-long battle to restore the authorship rights to her plagiarised BLitt thesis. Somerville played a significant role in this case for restorative justice, which you can read about here.

Pat Owtram arriving at the Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture 2024 with Principal Jan Royall before receiving applause as news of her Honorary Fellowship was announced.
Now 100 years old, Patricia describes herself as the only centenarian in Chiswick who knows how to use a Sten gun. In 2023, she was named The Oldie magazine’s ‘Oldie Secret Agent of the Year’ by Gyles Brandreth.

Pat Owtram together with her younger sister Jean Argles (née Owtram, 1925-2023) during and after the war, and in Chiswick wearing her Victory medal and Bletchley badge
Pat Davies was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville in March 2024, and informed of the decision while attending the annual Dorothy Hodgkin Lecture. Speaking of the news, Pat commented, ‘I certainly never expected to become a Fellow of an Oxford College. However, I feel very privileged to have been considered worthy of this recognition. My family were not terribly supportive of university education for women, so I was only able to attend university because I received a grant in recognition of my wartime service in the WRNS. I must say I found it a wonderful opportunity and stepping stone to an interesting career!’
Our Principal Jan Royall added, ‘It is a privilege to have met Pat and welcomed her as an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College. Her extraordinary life embraces so many historic chapters, through all of which she has evidently moved with the same combination of intellect, integrity and humour that show her to be a quintessential Somervillian.’
Simon Russell Beale
Honorary FellowSir Simon Russell Beale is an English actor for television, stage and film, described by The Independent in 2009 as “the greatest stage actor of his generation”.
Sir Simon began his acting career at The Royal Court after gaining a first in English from the University of Cambridge. He then spent 8 years with the Royal Shakespeare Company, making a name for himself with both comedic and tragic roles, before joining the National Theatre, where he remained on and off for 25 years.
During the course of an illustrious career on both stage and screen, Sir Simon has received ten Laurence Olivier Award nominations, including three wins for his performances in Volpone (1996), Candide (2000), and Uncle Vanya (2003). On Broadway, he been nominated for two Tony Awards, one of which he won for his performance as Henry Lehman in The Lehman Trilogy (2018). His work in film and TV has been recognised with two BAFTAs, one for the BBC’s Hollow Crown series (2012) and another for A Dance to the Music of Time (1997). In 2019 he was awarded a Knighthood in the Queen’s Birthday Honours for his services to the Arts.
Sir Simon engages with the theatre not only as a performer, but as an editor, author and public intellectual. He is a series editor of the Arden Performance editions of Shakespeare’s plays and his first full-length publication A Piece of Work, published in September 2024, will offer unparalleled insights into a lifetime of Shakespearean study and dramatic craft.
Sir Simon has been a close associate of Somerville College since 2015, when he spoke alongside our Fellow Emerita and Shakespeare expert Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones (1941-2022) at a literary tea. He has since joined us for numerous events, and was made an Honorary Fellow of the College in June 2024 in recognition of this long and fruitful association with the College.

Sir Simon Russell Beale in ‘The Lehman Trilogy’
Responding to receiving the Honorary Fellowship, Sir Simon said, “I am delighted with this great honour that Somerville College has awarded me. Over the years, and during many visits to the College, particularly through my meetings with Katherine Duncan-Jones and Emma Smith, my affection for the College has grown and I anticipate confidently that it will grow still further. It is marvellous to play a small part in the history of an institution that is so rightly proud of its inclusivity and its sense of adventure.”
An honorary fellowship is the college’s highest recognition of distinction for alumni and associates, conferred annually by our Governing Body. Speaking of the College’s decision to grant Sir Simon this honour, Principal Jan Royall said, “It is delightful to know that, through this association, Somerville College can reaffirm our long-standing commitment to the humanities and anticipate many more such unforgettable encounters with Sir Simon. He is a thoroughly good man, a phenomenal actor and a livewire connection to the world of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.”

Sir Simon with (l-r) Professor Fiona Stafford, Hon. Fellow Professor Emma Smith (1988, English), and Principal Jan Royall
Honey Hinkson
Development AssistantMelhi K Mistry
Foundation FellowMehli K Mistry is a noted philanthropist and a Shareholder and Director of the over 80-year-old M. Pallonji Group (India).
Mr Mistry has a rich experience of running and managing all the M Pallonji Group companies, with diverse business interests that include industrial painting, dredging, marine transport, shipping and insurance.
Mr Mistry is also a philanthropist who sits on the board of multiple trusts. His philanthropic work includes an unswerving focus on girls’ education as well as helping to manage India’s largest philanthropic Trust, of which he is a permanent Trustee.
Finally, Mr Mistry is a champion of the arts, currently serving as a trustee of the National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA), the Indian equivalent of the Lincoln Center of New York.
Somerville College is grateful to have enjoyed a long and meaningful friendship with Mr Mistry, a man of rare integrity whose vision for the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development chimes deeply with our own. In recognition of these many years of friendship, Somerville College was pleased to extend a Foundation Fellowship to Mr Mistry in 2025.
Ariel Greiner
Academic Project SupervisorI am an NSERC Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the MCEM group in the Department of Biology.
My main research interest is the use of mathematical modelling to study the dynamics of ecosystems and disease systems to predict mechanistic relationships among system processes and then use that knowledge to inform management policy and design. In particular, I am interested in understanding how movement between discrete patches might influence and inform management of large-scale systems such as coral reefs and national farm networks. In all of my research I work with local stakeholders to develop and parameterize mathematical models to answer pertinent questions about local systems that directly inform their management policy and design.
My website can be found at http://www.arielgreiner.com.
Ghaith Al Najjar
Associate Members RepGhaith is a former Msc student who read Radiobiology in 2023/24.
As the previous MCR treasurer, he was involved in running MCR finances, and helped organise events and activities. As the current associate member representative, he aims to improve accessibility of associate members to college and MCR life. He is also the first point of contact for MCR associate members, and communicates closely with college. Ghaith’s proudest college achievement: the first ever student at Somerville to successfully borrow and drive the college van, bringing the MCR our lovely foosball table (with the help of Tim of course, see picture).
Chloe Phillips
First Generation and Low Income Student RepHey, I’m Chloe the First Generation and Low Income Student Rep in the MCR.
I am a first year DPhil Student in Primary Healthcare Sciences, exploring Sarcoma and AI using social science research methods, I’m a Sociologist by background. I am also a first-gen student! In the coming year I will be running some events and workshops within the MCR to support the first gen and low income graduate students. Outside of my DPhil I am a powerlifter, coffee lover and reader.
Feel free to contact me with any concerns or queries.
Wantoe T. Wantoe
Oxford Student Union RepresentativeMy name is Wantoe T. Wantoe, and I am from Liberia. I am currently an MSc candidate in Comparative and International Education at the Department of Education, University of Oxford. Previously, I completed a Master in Public Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government, Oxford.
I serve as the Oxford Student Union Representative for the Middle Common Room (MCR) at Somerville College, where I ensure inclusivity and advocate for the voices of Somerville students within the larger Oxford Student Union. My role focuses on fostering a supportive environment where diverse perspectives are valued, and students’ needs and concerns are effectively represented in university-wide decision-making.
Aparajita Kaul
Women’s RepHi, my name is Aparajita (She/Her), and I am a graduate student reading for the Bachelor of Civil Law.
I am an intersectional feminist and aim to view the world from this lens to be conscious of, and reveal, the various ways in which our policies, infrastructures and values reflect and perpetuate women’s oppression. I enjoy studying both private and public law issues from a feminist perspective, ranging from insolvency law to domestic violence.
As the MCR Women’s Representative, my aim is to ensure that Somerville is and remains an inclusive space that champions women from all walks of life. This ranges from organising events that celebrate women to ensuring that women feel safe and comfortable on campus.
I am always available for a quick chat, coffee, or if you just need a study partner. 🙂 I am happy to discuss any concerns with full confidentiality and an open mind.
Gladson Vaghela
Welfare OfficerHello there, I’m Gladson Vaghela, and I’m delighted to serve as your MCR Welfare Officer. I’m currently reading for my MSc in Global Health Science and Epidemiology.
In my capacity as Welfare Officer, I’m dedicated to being your ally in navigating the challenges that may arise during your time at university. Whether it’s a health-related concern, a mental well-being issue, or if you just need someone to talk to, I’m here to provide a listening ear and guide you to the appropriate resources. Think of me as your personal signpost, directing you to the vast support network we have, from counselling services to health centres and all essential support groups. Additionally, I come from a background in medicine, which I hope brings an added layer of understanding and empathy to our interactions.
Reaching out for help can sometimes feel daunting—trust me, I’ve been there. But please know that I am always happy to hear from you, and confidentiality is a cornerstone of our interactions. Remember, no problem is too big or too small. University life is a journey with its fair share of ups and downs, and seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness.
So whether you need assistance or simply fancy a chat over a cup of coffee, my offer stands—don’t hesitate to reach out. Let’s create an inclusive and supportive community where each one of us can truly thrive.
Mahek Bhatia
MCR Disabled Students RepMahek Bhatia is reading for the MSc in Criminology and Criminal Justice in the Faculty of Law. She is interested in the intersections between feminist legal theories and criminal justice, specifically within the context of marital sexual violence.
Previously, she served as an Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion Officer at Warwick Law School during her LLB, where she actively engaged with various departments and committees to represent student concerns.
As your Disabled Students’ Representative, she is interested in making available resources more accessible to students, and building a community and forum for students to voice their disability-related concerns. Please feel free to reach out to her to voice any issues you may be facing, or if you just want to chat.
Jairus Tristan Patoc
MCR PresidentHi! I am Jairus, a third-year DPhil student in Experimental Particle Physics working on one of the four main experiments at the Large Hadron Collider. I like techno, Common Ground Oat Flat Whites, and thrifting. During my time at Somerville, I’ve been active in Committee – previously as Social Secretary and one of the a Equality & Diversity Rep’s – and I’m now honoured to be the MCR President. In my role, I oversee the MCR committee, ensuring everyone responsible in committee is fulfilling their roles effectively. Therefore, I oversee the social, welfare, and financial aspects of the MCR as a whole. From this, I lead meetings within the MCR and MCR committee, have regular updates with the Principal and other senior management, and represent the MCR within the College and the Oxford SU. But most importantly? I’m here to listen. Our MCR is wonderfully diverse, and I’m committed to ensuring everyone feels heard and supported. If you’ve got ideas to make our community even better (big or small) I’d love to hear it.
Hannie Lawlor
College LecturerHannie Lawlor holds a BA and MSt in Spanish and French from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford and completed her DPhil on twenty-first-century Spanish and French women’s writing at Wolfson College, Oxford, under the supervision of Dr Daniela Omlor and Professor Marie-Chantal Killeen. Prior to taking up her current post at LMH and Somerville, she held stipendiary and departmental lecturer posts in Spanish at Oxford and was Lecturer in Spanish at University College Dublin.
Research Interests
Hannie’s research focuses primarily on women’s autobiographical practices in the twentieth- and twenty-first century. She is particularly interested in comparative approaches, whether it be considering works across languages and cultures or across media. Her first monograph, Relational Responses to Trauma in Twenty-First-Century French and Spanish Women’s Writing, analysed intergenerational responses to traumatic loss and her current project builds on these findings to explore what she defines as the impossible conversation as a crucial mode of narrative transmission.
Teaching
Hannie teaches the full Prelims course for students in Spanish at LMH and Somerville College and convenes Introduction to Spanish Film (XI) for students of Spanish Sole. For FHS, she teaches peninsular options in literature and film for the modern period paper (VIII) and special authors including Ramón del Valle-Inclán, Federico García Lorca, and Benito Pérez Galdós for Paper XI. She co-teaches Paper XII ‘Women Writers in Modern Spain’ and supervises extended essays (XIV), bridge essays, and master’s theses on twentieth- and twenty-first-century women’s writing, life writing, film, memory, and trauma. She welcomes expressions of interest from prospective PhD candidates working on related modern peninsular topics.
As a former first-generation student from a non-selective state school, Hannie is keenly committed to access and outreach initiatives. She is Schools Liaison representative for the Spanish Sub-Faculty and eager to receive applications from students from schools who do not have a history of sending students to Oxbridge.
Selected Publications
Relational Responses to Trauma in Twenty-First-Century French and Spanish Women’s Writing (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024)
The Autofictional: Approaches, Affordances, Forms, ed. by Alexandra Effe and Hannie Lawlor (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022)
Effe, Alexandra and Lawlor, Hannie, ‘Rethinking Autofiction as a Global Practice: Trajectories of Anglophone Criticism from 2000 to 2020’, a/b Auto/biography Studies (2024), 1–33
‘Conflicting Relations in Christine Angot’s Un amour impossible [‘An Impossible Love’]’, Journal of Romance Studies, 22.3 (2022), 311–30
Forthcoming
‘Resisting Imposed Identities in Postwar Fictions of the Self: Carmen Laforet’s Nada (1945) and Rosa Chacel’s Memorias de Leticia Valle (1945)’, in Del franquismo a la democracia: género y autoridad en las auto/representaciones de las escritoras españolas de posguerra, ed. by Raquel Fernández Menéndez and Aina Pérez Fontdevila (forthcoming 2025 in Hispanic Research Journal)
‘Post-Traumatic Transitions: Writing Women’s Lives in Dulce Chacón’s La voz dormida [The Sleeping Voice]’, in Feminine Plural: Women in Transition in the Luso-Hispanic World, ed. by María-José Blanco and Claire Williams (forthcoming 2025 with Peter Lang)
‘Montage and Narrative Mode: Hybrid Stories and Storytelling by Contemporary Women Writers’, in Montage in Spanish and Portuguese Literature, ed. by Daniela Omlor and Luisa Coelho (forthcoming 2025 in Bulletin of Contemporary Hispanic Studies)
‘Agnostic Memory and Impossible Conversations in Life Writing’, in Memory Studies in Spain and Portugal: A Handbook, ed. by Alison Ribeiro de Menezes and Ellen W. Sapega (forthcoming with Brill)
Jamie Chua
JCR Charities OfficerWelcome to Somerville! I’m Jamie, a fourth-year studying Psychology and Linguistics (though it’s really just Psychology now rip). As the JCR Charities’ officer, my job is to help the JCR support a range of different charities and organisations through sharing volunteering opportunities, organising fundraisers, and organising the charity ballot (the termly donation of JCR charity contributions). In this role, I am also the college contact for RAG (the SU’s funding campaign) and Molly‘s library (set up in 2003 by a group of Somervillians in Ghana and continuing to receive support from college).
I’m always happy to hear about and help with any charity-related idea, initiative or whim, so please find me at jamie.chua@some.ox.ac.uk if you have any (and I mean ANY)! I hope that you find Somerville a place where you are free to pursue the causes you care about, and aim to help make it that.
Thomas Bainbridge
JCR PresidentHi! I’m Tom (he/him), a second-year English student, and I am your JCR president for this academic year.
My role in the college is to lead the JCR (Junior Common Room), which consists of identity, welfare and administrative officers who seek to represent your interests within the college. We strive to put on lots of events, including a series of infamous Somerville BOPs (basically College parties), but also take issues, new ideas, and demands for change to the College as to make your time here as comfortable and inclusive as possible. As part of this, we enable conversations between the student body and the college staff through fortnightly ‘Open Meetings’ (meetings open to the entire Junior Common Room/undergraduate body) which formally look to scope the changes the student body would like to see. If you ever feel like we can be doing something better as a college, want support for your own interests and endeavours, or are keen to start a society or initiative, we would love to support you this!
I am always up for a chat, albeit to answer questions about the JCR or even just help with getting to grips with the college and life at Oxford more generally, so feel absolutely free to catch me walking about Somerville, or shoot me a message at thomas.bainbridge@some.ox.ac.uk.
Mar Umbert-Kimura
Chapel and Music AdministratorAarthee Parimelalaghan
Access and Outreach Support OfficerAarthee studied PPE at Somerville and previously acted as the JCR Access and Admissions Officer.
Isabel Parkinson
Stipendiary LecturerMy current research examines English translations of a selection of German language novels, from Irmgard Keun’s Das kunstseidene Mädchen and Gilgi to Sasha Marianna Salzmann’s Ausser Sich. I focus on consciousness narratives whose authors have attempted to (and sometimes struggled to) articulate the mind of a gendered subject, and investigate how, and how successfully, these attempts have been translated into English. I am particularly interested in how creative, radical translational decisions seem especially suited to recreating the force and flavour of the original text.
I have a particular interest in teaching translation from German to English, at all levels and in a variety of ways. Recently I held a feminist translation micro-conference with second years, in which students workshopped German extracts together and presented their findings in the form of lightning talks. Other recent classes have focused on the translation of wordplay, children’s books, newspaper reports, and prose poetry. I also teach the core German Literature paper, and offer modules on Psychoanalysis, ‘Postwar Restoration Frenzy’ in Austria, Representing Trauma, as well as Goethe, and the Enlightenment.
I design and deliver outreach sessions for the Medieval and Modern Languages Faculty, to promote progression to languages A-Levels and GCSEs. I am working with schools in the North of England as part of the Faculty’s VOx programme, and have developed and led sessions around tactile translations of German poetry, the bilingual identity, and English-to-English translation classes.
Publications
‘Mind Your Language! Profanity and Promiscuity in Two English Translations of Irmgard Keun’s Das kunstseidene Mädchen (1932)’, Journal of Languages, Texts and Society, 7 (2024) [available from lts-vol.-7-final-i-parkinson.pdf (nottingham.ac.uk)]
Daniel Jukes
Stipendiary LecturerDaniel is a barrister and currently a Probationary Tenant at Wilberforce Chambers.
Daniel teaches Roman Law at Somerville, having previously taught FHS Contract Law on behalf of the College in 2023. Daniel also teaches FHS Company Law on behalf of the Law Faculty. Alongside his academic and professional commitments, Daniel is a DPhil (part-time) candidate researching the control of discretionary powers and duties in company law, contract law, and insolvency law and is supervised by Professor Christopher Hare.
Publications:
- ‘Case Analysis: Dexia’ (2022) 37 (11) JIBFL 770 – considering the ISDA Master Agreement and conflicts of law.
- ‘Case Analysis: FCA v Papadimitrakopoulos’ (2023) 38 (1) JIBFL 55 – considering the use of information obtained during criminal investigations in market abuse cases brought under FSMA 2000.
- ‘BTI 2014 LLC v Sequana SA and others [2022] UKSC 25’ (2023) 44 (3) The Company Lawyer 87
- ‘Case Analysis: Loreley Financing’ (2023) 38 (2) JIBFL 127 – considering the scope of litigation privilege.
- ‘Case Analysis: Celestial Aviation Services’ (2023) 38 (5) JIBFL 356 – considering the scope of sanctions on letters of credit.
- ‘Case Analysis: Banca Intesa Sanpaolo’ (2024) 39 (3) JIBFL 203 – considering the capacity of Italian local authorities to enter into interest rates swaps and the application of unjust enrichment.
- ‘Case Analysis: G4S’ (2024) 39 (3) JIBFL 204 – considering the rule in Sharp v Blank