Will post-Brexit Britain overcome or fall further upon Enoch Powell’s troubling legacy?
It is 50 years since his notorious “rivers of blood” speech. Yet, in the intervening decades, Powell’s ideas have…
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It is 50 years since his notorious “rivers of blood” speech. Yet, in the intervening decades, Powell’s ideas have…
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The playwright and screenwriter talks revolution, the Kardashians and US gun laws.
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Each week in the UK, 84 men kill themselves – three times the number of women.
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The 1980s pop sensation has mastered something icons frequently master: the art of reinvention.
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For women in music, being described most of the time by men is just par for the course.
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Here is the clever bit: they always, for some reason that I cannot possibly fathom, choose a nice young woman…
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The NHS performs so many miracles every day – in comparison, feeding the sick should be a doddle.
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In Kearney, the BBC has (for once) identified the right star.
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The six-part film cannot effectively explain his appeal for the 30,000 people who joined his communes during the 1980s.
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She has raised the bar of pop music so high that her musical contemporaries can only crane their necks…
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This tale of the “coughing major” is a nostalgic romp through the rise of reality television.
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The provocative auteur talks to Ryan Gilbey about sex at 71, her obsession with Juliette Binoche and why his…
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Hard knocks and Hollywood adventures in new memoirs by Gucci Mane, Wiley and U-God of the Wu-Tang Clan.
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: In The Wandering Vine: Wine, the Romans and Me, Nina Caplan blends travel, history, thinking and drinking.
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The Peruvian writer’s The King is Always Above the People dazzles with allegorical power and satire.
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How atheisms are imitating the religions they claim to reject.
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Our leaders need to act like the outbreak has already started – because for all we know it may…
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To Throw Away Unopened tests her understanding of herself against the story of her parents’ marriage and deaths.
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Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, is convinced that a new war is on the cards.
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The West has still not reckoned with its first mistake in Syria: demanding the removal of Assad.
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Flying through blue sky towards London, the Luftwaffe crews were in a confident mood. It was 15 September 1940…
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The first in a New Statesman series examining the reality of the age of austerity – and how it is affecting people’s lives.
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My Liver Birds reboot, set in the present day with new music and a new story, is coming to…
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It seems swivel-eyed to condemn rhetorical “attacks” and blithely ignore physical ones.
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A new “accelerationist” movement, defined by its embrace of technological determinism, represents a threat to the ethical socialist tradition and liberal democracy.
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Guardiola is a philosopher, at least as football understands the term.
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When we try to be more British we frequently end up sounding more French.
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Or, as has happened before, the French may suddenly summon their revolutionary spirit and choose to disavow him.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from Westminster.
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Downing Street’s legal advice said it was to “alleviate overwhelming humanitarian suffering”. How it achieved this was not explained.
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The Syrian president is now far more secure than in 2013, when the West decided not to intervene. The latest…
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Rough sleeping and child poverty are rising, while the NHS and schools struggle.
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