Why the First World War was no waste
To us the conflict might seem futile, but the soldiers who fought saw things very differently. The deaths of millions changed…
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To us the conflict might seem futile, but the soldiers who fought saw things very differently. The deaths of millions changed…
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At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, was one brilliant, self-assured British economist right and all the assembled statesmen…
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In Trafalgar Square and in the countryside, revellers went hand-in-hand in circles singing songs round the flames.
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This month, 100 years ago, the war ended. But had it lasted into 1919 the future of the world…
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Kipling is associated with sentimental children’s fiction or tub-thumping racism, but his best fiction captures the horrors of empire, acted…
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Maisie Williams shines in this play of boy-meets-girl-with-serious-illness.
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We need a renewed critique of capitalism – but is discouraging the lifestyle of educated young people and promoting the…
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The crime was set up to look like a burglary gone wrong, but the police realised that the murderer…
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Theresa May’s most trusted civil service lieutenant has been at her side throughout her reign at the Home Office…
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In the artist duo’s latest installation they transform the ground floor of the Whitechapel Gallery into a derelict public baths.
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The film is informative, but sadly almost never engaging.
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“I learned to live without hope – and that continues.”
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Not exactly renowned as an amiable interviewee, Crowe gives a great performance as a BBC 6 Music host.
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Plus: the new series of House of Cards.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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It just goes to show theatre’s enduring power to disturb.
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I have something of an antipathy to variegated foliage. Perhaps it is the Darwin in me.
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A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
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The caves, where families slept in three-tier bunk beds or pitches, had electric lighting, a canteen, a hospital and a police station.
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The economic debate is moving towards Labour terrain, but the party won’t seize the advantage.
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I tried this thing for the hell of it, even though I do not have a problem in that…
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Years of austerity-driven spending cuts have piled stress and pressure on NHS staff, many of whom have voted with…
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The broadcaster talks This Country, Van Morrison, and her favourite Buddhist monk, Pema Chödrön.
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As we mark the centenary of the Armistice, all that is clear is that the peace was as intractable…
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Austerity has been moderated, rather than abandoned.Three-quarters of the £12bn of welfare cuts announced since 2015 will go ahead.
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The victory of the far-right Jair Bolsonaro demonstrates how quickly the centre can evaporate.
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