Top 10 Hardest Oxbridge Interview Questions
We asked our top Oxbridge-educated mentors the hardest question they were asked in their interviews:
βPeople keep saying English Literature is a useless subject. Why are they wrong?β
Adam Goodbody
Hertford College, Oxford
Asked and answered in French βIt is clear that history shapes literature, but can you explain to what extent literature shapes history?β
Anya Davies
New College, Oxford
βWhat period do you think this was written in and why?β
Eloise Poulton
Trinity College, Cambridge
βMy tutor gave me a plate with a bowl over it and told me he was going to show me five objects under the lid, and that I'd have 30 seconds to think and then 1 minute to relate the item to theology, and the items were horse hair, a bird skull, a tibetan prayer wheel and a bust of aristotle.
I was then asked after that if communism was incompatible for religion.β
Hugo McPherson
Brasenose College, Oxford
βWhy should students of literature care about Coronation Street?β
Rosalind Brody
Christ Church, Oxford
βHere are lines and dots. How would you play it?β
Conall McHugh
New College, Oxford
βCan literature exist without history?β
Camilla Dunhill
New College, Oxford
βIβve seen the books on your Personal Statement. Right, what else have you read?β
Henry Faber
Balliol, Oxford
βWhat does the phrase political landscape mean in geographical terms?β
Rafe Studholme
St. Edmund Hall, Oxford
βWhat is poetry?β
Andrew Dickinson
Christ Church, Oxford
βWhat does the light mean in Matthewβs Gospel?β
Walter Kerr
St Cuthbertβs Society, Durham