“The social movements of our time are explosive“: Aaron Benanav on robots and revolution
The economic historian and social theorist discusses automation and the future of the left.
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The economic historian and social theorist discusses automation and the future of the left.
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The hit Netflix show, with its captivating anti-hero Beth Harmon, has brought the game to new demographics, with the number…
By
At 76, I am one of the 13 million that qualify for a vaccine. But I don’t have any faith…
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
How coronavirus mutations could imperil the vaccine rollout.
By
When the work-life balance is eradicated, no hour of the day will go unmonetised.
By
“A certain type of masculinity willing to think of natural resources as something that exist for humans to grab, use,…
By
Community Clothing operates from a number of factories in Britain as well as its hub in Blackburn: the Scottish…
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
The Houthis have their own reasons for hurting the Saudis – the war in Yemen is a humanitarian nightmare…
By
Keir Starmer has not yet capitalised on the woes of the Pandemic PM – and Labour MPs are starting to…
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In July, scientific advisers warned of the potential for a significant coronavirus variant to occur in the winter. But…
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The master of the spy novel could be simultaneously old-fashioned and thoroughly modern – but what made his fiction…
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A new poem by Ben Okri.
By
This book acts as damning primary source material, exposing policy failings through the day-to-day life of a GP in 2020.
By
Szejnert’s Ellis Island, Murata’s Earthlings, Rosenbloom’s Dark Archives and Erpenbeck’s Not a Novel.
By
The literary highlights of the year ahead, from family sagas to historical fiction.
By
The literary highlights of the coming year span everything from big-picture investigations into the pandemic to moving personal memoirs. …
By
As the respected computer scientist Michael Wooldridge explains, AI is the story of an effort to impose the order of mathematics…
By
Rebecca Solnit steps into the culture wars with her new essay collection Whose Story is This?
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In Amharic, “Lemn” means “Why?” – and Sissay spends his book trying to answer that question. Why were he…
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In the world of Atkinson Grimshaw it is always autumn or winter, always evening, and the rain has just…
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Five years after his death, friends and admirers remember David Bowie not as an otherworldly genius but a magpie…
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In this sensitive three-episode series, journalist Rosie Millard speaks to creatives who are yet to have “made it”.
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I’m quite sure it says nothing good at all about me that I’m really into this outlandish period drama,…
By
Bowie was 36 when he starred in Scott’s 1983 erotic horror. Five years after his death, it feels strange…
By
These highly educated boys, with their Greek and their Latin. How come they can’t find the right words now?
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The drama asks sensitive questions about bias, the myth of the “perfect victim”, and who suffers at the hands of…
By
Father-son relationship problems aren’t enough to drive this film forward.
By
Far from discreetly sidelining Boycott while debate festered over his knighthood, on Test Match Special it was almost business…
By
History will record the British government’s handling of Covid-19 as a study in false hope and failure.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New…
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Labour undoubtedly faces a strategic dilemma, simultaneously representing some of the most pro-Remain seats and some of the most pro-Leave…
By
Women’s magazines and Bridget Jones’s Diary taught me to believe constant self-criticism and a desire to change wasn’t a system flaw, but…
By
Brexit has changed voter attitudes towards immigration and soothed their anxieties. But it might prove the only issue that…
By
One early morning, in the last turning week of the year, my spirits lift at the sight of the dawn…
By
Donald Trump may be on his way out, but unless he faces legal consequences for his attempts to abuse…
By
The 1988 split between prime minister and European Commission president explains where Brexit came from – and where it might…
By
The rapid shift in the political weather since Brexit has seen the ex-cricketer’s brand of armchair populism dusted down and put…
By
Most of those nursing me back to health have come to Britain from elsewhere – although mostly not within…
By
In the cases of Peter Sutcliffe and the Wests the terrible privacy of the family is apparent, the possibility that…
By
Leave’s weakness has been compounded by the leadership of both Theresa May and Boris Johnson.
By
This year, more than ever, it seems an indulgence too far for legislators to have time off to drink…
By
There are books that give the impression at least half a gardener’s waking hours are spent in the potting shed.…
By
Spurs have started tumbling again and worst of all, I fear that thanks to José, we are unlikely to celebrate…
By
I had really begun to think a 57-year-old slob with no money, a barely in-control wine habit and a problematic…
By
I always saw the appeal of living by myself. But during lockdown, it feels less like liberation and more…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
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The novelist and playwright on empire, task management and writing on toilet paper.
By
It’s just a shame the place is so far away from London.
By
In the Outer Hebrides, teenage gannets are hunted once a year, left to pickle in their juices on the…
By
Aggie’s twin sister had died a couple of months before. Initial grief had given way to sleeplessness and increasingly…
By
Round numbers scare me, especially since I was ejected from the Hovel ten years to the day from when I moved…
By
The novelist talks Don Quixote, the Beatles, and rewriting history to erase Donald Trump.
By
The hit Netflix show, with its captivating anti-hero Beth Harmon, has brought the game to new demographics, with the number…
By
A new poem by Ben Okri.
By
This book acts as damning primary source material, exposing policy failings through the day-to-day life of a GP in 2020.
By
Szejnert’s Ellis Island, Murata’s Earthlings, Rosenbloom’s Dark Archives and Erpenbeck’s Not a Novel.
By
The literary highlights of the year ahead, from family sagas to historical fiction.
By
The literary highlights of the coming year span everything from big-picture investigations into the pandemic to moving personal memoirs. …
By
At 76, I am one of the 13 million that qualify for a vaccine. But I don’t have any faith…
By
As the respected computer scientist Michael Wooldridge explains, AI is the story of an effort to impose the order of mathematics…
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
How coronavirus mutations could imperil the vaccine rollout.
By
Women’s magazines and Bridget Jones’s Diary taught me to believe constant self-criticism and a desire to change wasn’t a system flaw, but…
By
In this sensitive three-episode series, journalist Rosie Millard speaks to creatives who are yet to have “made it”.
By
Brexit has changed voter attitudes towards immigration and soothed their anxieties. But it might prove the only issue that…
By
I’m quite sure it says nothing good at all about me that I’m really into this outlandish period drama,…
By
One early morning, in the last turning week of the year, my spirits lift at the sight of the dawn…
By
Bowie was 36 when he starred in Scott’s 1983 erotic horror. Five years after his death, it feels strange…
By
Donald Trump may be on his way out, but unless he faces legal consequences for his attempts to abuse…
By
There are books that give the impression at least half a gardener’s waking hours are spent in the potting shed.…
By
Spurs have started tumbling again and worst of all, I fear that thanks to José, we are unlikely to celebrate…
By
The 1988 split between prime minister and European Commission president explains where Brexit came from – and where it might…
By
I had really begun to think a 57-year-old slob with no money, a barely in-control wine habit and a problematic…
By
I always saw the appeal of living by myself. But during lockdown, it feels less like liberation and more…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman‘s Subscriber of the Week.
By
The novelist and playwright on empire, task management and writing on toilet paper.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New…
By
History will record the British government’s handling of Covid-19 as a study in false hope and failure.
By
It’s just a shame the place is so far away from London.
By
The rapid shift in the political weather since Brexit has seen the ex-cricketer’s brand of armchair populism dusted down and put…
By
Most of those nursing me back to health have come to Britain from elsewhere – although mostly not within…
By
In the cases of Peter Sutcliffe and the Wests the terrible privacy of the family is apparent, the possibility that…
By
Rebecca Solnit steps into the culture wars with her new essay collection Whose Story is This?
By
When the work-life balance is eradicated, no hour of the day will go unmonetised.
By
“A certain type of masculinity willing to think of natural resources as something that exist for humans to grab, use,…
By
In Amharic, “Lemn” means “Why?” – and Sissay spends his book trying to answer that question. Why were he…
By
The drama asks sensitive questions about bias, the myth of the “perfect victim”, and who suffers at the hands of…
By
Community Clothing operates from a number of factories in Britain as well as its hub in Blackburn: the Scottish…
By
The Houthis have their own reasons for hurting the Saudis – the war in Yemen is a humanitarian nightmare…
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
Father-son relationship problems aren’t enough to drive this film forward.
By
Leave’s weakness has been compounded by the leadership of both Theresa May and Boris Johnson.
By
Far from discreetly sidelining Boycott while debate festered over his knighthood, on Test Match Special it was almost business…
By
These highly educated boys, with their Greek and their Latin. How come they can’t find the right words now?
By
In the Outer Hebrides, teenage gannets are hunted once a year, left to pickle in their juices on the…
By
This year, more than ever, it seems an indulgence too far for legislators to have time off to drink…
By
Aggie’s twin sister had died a couple of months before. Initial grief had given way to sleeplessness and increasingly…
By
Round numbers scare me, especially since I was ejected from the Hovel ten years to the day from when I moved…
By
The novelist talks Don Quixote, the Beatles, and rewriting history to erase Donald Trump.
By
Labour undoubtedly faces a strategic dilemma, simultaneously representing some of the most pro-Remain seats and some of the most pro-Leave…
By