Letter of the week: When the fog descends
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New Times,
New Thinking.
Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
No country can escape the consequences of an overheating planet – as recent extreme weather events around the globe have…
ByHow our writer was prompted to reflect on the ideology’s beginnings, after the experience of life in lockdown exposed the legacy of…
ByThe BBC – reflecting the priorities of its audience – has reimagined the greatest sporting pageant on Earth as…
ByThe commercial success of two new books shows how what were once controversial ideas can become mainstream.
ByWe face an imminent crime surge, but our government is more concerned with protecting monuments than citizens.
ByBoris Johnson needs to recognise that flooding could be better controlled if our tattered national infastructure was fixed.
ByMy wife and I take the train to the coast, where we admire those brave enough to be spun upside…
ByTwenty years after the US invaded Afghanistan, the Taliban seems stronger than it has ever been and its leaders are…
ByA book saved from a library in Seoul during the Korean War has finally returned home, bringing with it…
ByThis is three books in one: a tongue-in-cheek account of one woman’s midlife crisis, a dissertation on modern education,…
ByAll In It Together by Turner, Two Girls, Fat and Thin by Gaitskill, The 32, edited by McVeigh and Notes on the…
ByFeaturing moths, maids and mermen.
ByGuitarist Will Sergeant on growing up poor and embracing post-punk in Seventies Liverpool.
ByThis tumultuous age demands that we rethink our relationship with the past.
ByA major new work of feminist philosophy opens up debates about sex, pornography, justice and liberty.
ByHow Friedrich’s late masterpiece, The Great Enclosure, offers us a glimpse of the artist’s inner life.
ByLike all good oral history, this series about the New Cross house fire and the Brixton riots doesn’t prettify, and…
ByAfter her appearance in court, a flurry of podcasts on Britney Spears’s conservatorship seek to explain how and why…
ByThis otherwise conventional spy story starring Benedict Cumberbatch suddenly morphs into a different kind of movie in its final third.
ByHenri-Edmond Cross envisaged the Mediterranean as a utopia for the deserving working man.
ByA Star Wars geek turned the debt-ridden comic studio into a cinematic juggernaut – and became the most powerful…
ByBarça’s history comes wrapped in legends – or are they myths?
ByThe journalist discusses Laura Bates’s Men Who Hate Women, Jim Henson and town planning.
ByEmail ellys.woodhouse@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's Subscriber of the Week.
ByIf successful, the Galleri trial could be revolutionary in helping the NHS to detect the early stages of cancer in…
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByI don’t mean like an image of the Virgin Mary in an Italian hill town, visible only to true…
ByOne of the most delightful things about Brighton is that every bus has someone’s name on the front, resurrecting…
ByTake your pick from a host of fishing museums, orchard tours and gloriously eccentric food museums.
ByThe late Bryan Magee, populariser of philosophy and communicator of complex ideas, grappled with the fundamental questions and mysteries of…
ByBridget Jones’s Diary is a relic from New Labour’s peak, when Working Title films were weapons of British soft…
ByWith the Union on the brink, the radical nationalism of the Scottish intellectual seems more prescient than ever.
ByAfter runs for the Tory leadership and mayor of London, the former cabinet minister is criss-crossing continents. Could he…
ByI think of the summer swifts, those tiny intercontinental airships dreaming of warmer places; longing, like us, to take…
ByWhat the Western world confronts is not the threatening advance of alien civilisations, but its own dark shadows moving…
ByThe Cambridge professor on how pure maths underpins the modern world.
ByAfter wildfires devastate California and commuters drown in China, it is obvious to me that Extinction Rebellion is right.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe £1,000-a-year cut would increase child poverty, damage economic growth and intensify regional inequality.
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