The chancellor of the University of Oxford, currently Lord Patten of Barnes, has a page, whose job it is to walk behind him and hold his long gold-trimmed gown at formal events. Some dinners at All Souls College feature walking stick-like implements known as Lord Bathurst鈥檚 fingers, which are 鈥渦sed to push and pull the port bottle along the table鈥.
A new book of photographs of the University of Oxford and its colleges, the product of unprecedented access gained by Martin Parr, one of Britain鈥檚 most renowned contemporary photographers, captures those arcane traditions. But the book, titled Oxford,听also portrays other sides to Oxford life: sweaty-looking and exuberant scenes from the dance floor of Wadham College鈥檚 Queerfest; and the Armenian, Polish and Czech and Slovak societies setting out their stalls to freshers.
Mr Parr鈥檚 previous work has covered subjects as diverse as consumerism, Harrow School and the British seaside, with his focus often being on class. Oxford has a crucial role in the British Establishment and in the construction of elites in this country and beyond, yet it remains a hidden world to most.
鈥淭hat was part of my motivation 鈥 to get this access that most people wouldn鈥檛 get,鈥 Mr Parr told听Times Higher Education. 鈥淚鈥檝e looked at all the other books done on Oxford; some of the great photographers have done this [taken Oxford as their subject], and they basically haven鈥檛 really gained permission to go much beyond just the facade of the buildings.鈥
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Mr Parr had been 鈥渨orking on a series of pictures of late about the Establishment in Britain, so this seemed to me to be as good a place to go as any鈥, he said of the book, published by Oxford University Press on 7 September.
The project came about through a conversation with Richard Ovenden, then deputy librarian of the Bodleian Libraries, now holder of the library鈥檚 most senior executive post.
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Mr Parr said that the 鈥済reat thing about working with the Bodleian was that I was able to get access to some of this stuff behind the scenes 鈥 not everything, but substantially more than most people will get鈥.
Mr Parr鈥檚 time at the institution reaffirmed to him what he already 鈥渢hought was true: basically they [Oxford students] are being groomed to run the country鈥. He added that 鈥渢he whole thing of social etiquette, and meals, the small talk, the dressing up, the uniforms 鈥 that鈥檚 all part of learning to be part of the Establishment and thus going on to run the country鈥.
Dinners, balls and garden parties are fruitful subjects in the collection.
Members of The Syndicate, a drinking club at St Edmund Hall, pictured putting on a gruesome-looking dance routine during the Summer Eights rowing tournament, might find Mr Parr鈥檚 photo does for them what David Cameron鈥檚 Bullingdon Club photo did for him 鈥 once they end up running the country.
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A rather more formal social occasion pictured is the annual meeting of the Chancellor鈥檚 Court of Benefactors, in which only those who have gifted Oxford 拢1.5 million or more are eligible for membership.
One of the dynamics of the book is the contrast between antiquated traditions and the research carried out in gleaming labs using ultra-modern equipment. Although there is 鈥渁n inherent contradiction鈥 here, 鈥渢he two are quite compatible really, that鈥檚 the strange thing鈥, said Mr Parr.
There are other juxtapositions: an All Souls fellow and a cleaner at the college face each other across a spread of pages.
But Mr Parr is known for often satirising his subjects. Is he satirising Oxford here? 鈥淭he satire鈥s in the eye of the beholder,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 just show what goes on; people then have the opportunity to decide what they think.鈥
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