Even
if Oxford doesn't scoop the main prize in the race to become European
City of Culture, it is already a winner.
CITIES
IN THE RACE
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- Oxford
- Cardiff
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Bristol
-
Birmingham
-
Liverpool
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Newcastle and Gateshead
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All
five runners-up will be classed as European Centres of Culture in
the big year.
The
organisers - working under the title Oxford Inspires - insist that
many of their planned celebrations will go ahead regardless.
But
they may have to be scaled down if Oxfordshire doesn't get the main
title because national sponsorship would be harder to come by.
The
plan is to stage 15 key festivals in the county throughout the year,
covering all types of music but also technology, learning and even
food.
There
will be a strong international flavour, building on academic links
overseas and also Oxfordshire's active twinning groups.
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An
Oxford wood inspired C S Lewis's Narnia |
All
of that is in addition to the vast array of cultural feasts that
already take place.
Oxford
Literary Festival has already become a significant national event,
featuring 150 writers in 2003 - children's literary festival is
to be started too, from 2005.
The
team that created Oxfordshire's stunning millennium festival, Oomf!,
is being asked to work the same magic in 2005 and 2008.
Oxford's
bid is unique among the six finalists, because it is the only one
to include towns and villages outside the city.
The
bid takes culture in its widest meaning.
It
celebrates Oxfordshire's world-leading scientific work, rural life
and sporting achievements as well as the arts scene.
But
inevitably, great play is made of the university, the city's ancient
museums and Oxford's literary heritage.
It
is the setting for Alice in Wonderland, C S Lewis's Narnia and Tolkien's
Middle Earth.
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Oxford is joining in the festival frenzy by publishing features,
picture galleries and multi-media celebrations of the county's cultural
riches.
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