What the rise of Reagan tells us about the age of Trump
Rick Perlstein’s Reaganland charts the conservative counter-revolution that moved the US to the right.
By
Rick Perlstein’s Reaganland charts the conservative counter-revolution that moved the US to the right.
By
Variously depicted as a victim or a villain, perhaps no other writer has an afterlife more contested than Plath.
By
Despite an erratic publishing history, Tressell’s ferocious satire became ubiquitous in the early 20th century, and soon entered the…
By
Volckmer’s The Appointment, Falk’s The Light Ages, Tempest’s On Connection and Barry’s That Old Country Music.
By
In the past decade, the Jamaican-born poet has reversed the way we talk about race by focusing not on…
By
A new poem by Hugo Williams.
By
A new retrospective of Michael Clark explores the dancer’s legacy as both maverick and muse.
By
Collaging home movies and contemporary footage, Time is an impressionistic study of one woman’s attempts to see her husband…
By
We all know that Trump is in a world of “me” – but these films show the vanishingly small…
By
BBC Radio 4’s Michael Morpurgo’s Folk Journeys explores the musical tradition of songs about war, protest, immigration and love.
By
The Newcastle is Eton’s premier academic prize and has many famous past winners, including Boris Johnson, but rather than bringing…
By
The Democratic presidential hopeful and veteran insider could end the Trump era on 3 November. If he succeeds, will…
By
The Athletic journalist’s powers of observation have transformed the way we watch the game.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Mindful of our fractured world, the pope calls for a fairer sharing of resources, care for nature, and compassion…
By
The Swedish author on how the climate crisis is dramatically increasing the risk of future pandemics.
By
Boris Johnson and his ministers would prefer a Donald Trump victory, but they are belatedly love-bombing Joe Biden just in case.
By
How an ultra-conservative mother of seven rose to become Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed England’s political fragmentation and the failures of devolution, with northern politicians revolting against Westminster.
By
Even if Joe Biden does triumph on 3 November, this should not be mistaken for a restoration of some…
By
My family story is bound up in the displacement of Armenians from their ancestral lands. In the conflict between Azerbaijan…
By
Though Delhi is opening up again, it feels like a different city. The Indian capital seems to have mislaid its heart.
By
Statues are nothing more than a stone supplement to the preposterous honours system – and they should be removed.
By
My estimation of my own sexual and physical worth has always dramatically fluctuated depending on location and context.
By
The Tories are divided over whether to prioritise health or the economy. The Prime Minister is flirting with both.
By
Leaves can indicate the entire condition of an organism, and it repays every gardener to take notice.
By
Watching England play three times in a week has left me bored out of my wine-sodden mind.
By
As I squint through my window at the wind farm in the distance, I feel my next buy should be…
By
Andrew O’Hagan’s new novel, Mayflies, has me gripped as I revisit the giddy hedonism of Manchester in the 1980s.
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain – has run in…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
Despite an erratic publishing history, Tressell’s ferocious satire became ubiquitous in the early 20th century, and soon entered the…
By
Volckmer’s The Appointment, Falk’s The Light Ages, Tempest’s On Connection and Barry’s That Old Country Music.
By
In the past decade, the Jamaican-born poet has reversed the way we talk about race by focusing not on…
By
A new poem by Hugo Williams.
By
Collaging home movies and contemporary footage, Time is an impressionistic study of one woman’s attempts to see her husband…
By
We all know that Trump is in a world of “me” – but these films show the vanishingly small…
By
BBC Radio 4’s Michael Morpurgo’s Folk Journeys explores the musical tradition of songs about war, protest, immigration and love.
By
Leaves can indicate the entire condition of an organism, and it repays every gardener to take notice.
By
My estimation of my own sexual and physical worth has always dramatically fluctuated depending on location and context.
By
Watching England play three times in a week has left me bored out of my wine-sodden mind.
By
My family story is bound up in the displacement of Armenians from their ancestral lands. In the conflict between Azerbaijan…
By
As I squint through my window at the wind farm in the distance, I feel my next buy should be…
By
Statues are nothing more than a stone supplement to the preposterous honours system – and they should be removed.
By
Andrew O’Hagan’s new novel, Mayflies, has me gripped as I revisit the giddy hedonism of Manchester in the 1980s.
By
Though Delhi is opening up again, it feels like a different city. The Indian capital seems to have mislaid its heart.
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain – has run in…
By
Boris Johnson and his ministers would prefer a Donald Trump victory, but they are belatedly love-bombing Joe Biden just in case.
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
The Swedish author on how the climate crisis is dramatically increasing the risk of future pandemics.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Mindful of our fractured world, the pope calls for a fairer sharing of resources, care for nature, and compassion…
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Even if Joe Biden does triumph on 3 November, this should not be mistaken for a restoration of some…
By
The Tories are divided over whether to prioritise health or the economy. The Prime Minister is flirting with both.
By
The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed England’s political fragmentation and the failures of devolution, with northern politicians revolting against Westminster.
By
How an ultra-conservative mother of seven rose to become Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee.
By