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What the Hitler conspiracies mean
The Nazi dictator’s death in 1945 is well evidenced, but reports of his survival and escape to Argentina continue…
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The Nazi dictator’s death in 1945 is well evidenced, but reports of his survival and escape to Argentina continue…
ByConsumer demand is unlikely to die along with the 17 million mink culled in Denmark over coronavirus fears. Can anything…
ByIn Milan, we were told defeating Covid-19 depended on following the rules. Amid a second wave and further tough restrictions, Italy’s…
ByWhy was the UK hit harder than any other G7 economy? And what does the pandemic mean for its future model?
ByBeneath the guitarist's flamboyant virtuosity lay a life scarred by childhood neglect and depression.
ByBoyd’s Trio, Nir’s Horse Crazy, Lafarge’s Life Without Air, and Asylum for Sale edited by McGuirk and Pine.
ByA new poem by Paul Bailey.
ByAndrew Marr's Elizabethans is a history of the British national spirit from 1953 to the present day.
ByObama is too comfortable in his own skin to make a revelatory biographer.
ByTo depict the elements properly, Eardley immersed herself in them.
ByThis Kristen Stewart-Mackenzie Davis romcom asks “What if Meet the Parents had been 90 per cent gayer?”
ByI know some people find this sort of thing, rope initials and all, comforting. But it doesn’t soothe me.
ByA new podcast from the Australian Broadcasting Company begins with a very simple premise: throughout the history of the…
ByTuberculosis led to the rise of modernist public architecture. What will our cities look like after Covid-19?
ByThe creation of the Scottish parliament precipitated the collapse of more radical forms of territorial dissent, while failing to address…
ByThe mogul’s retail empire has crumbled. Is it all his fault?
ByA courtroom drama about the meaning of lies – and “inaccuracies” on Netflix.
ByThe British author discusses the long shadow of the Norman Conquest – and how England never recovered from it.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByFor the first time, the Oxford English Dictionary chose not to pick a Word of the Year – but Covid-19 has…
ByNow more than ever, we should learn from our prehistoric ancestors’ reverence for the Earth.
ByThe Green Dragon! The years roll away with a crash, and suddenly it’s 1984 again, and I’m getting pickled.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare's Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain – has…
ByMy mentor, Peter Tate, dedicated his career to changing the poor culture of communication in medicine in the 1970s.
ByEmail emily.bootle@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's Subscriber of the Week.
ByThe publisher discusses the leaders of the French Revolution, watching Call My Agent and reading Charles Dickens.
ByAt a retreat centre that was once Buddhist, I realise the human yearning for religion can take us to…
ByThe government’s “build back better” narrative renders the pandemic an opportunity – but ignores the fact that prior to Covid-19, something…
ByDoes Rupert Murdoch tell his editors what to write? Did the late Robert Fisk make things up? Is objectivity…
ByIn rejecting the League of Nations, the US turned away from the world – but the president-elect could change…
BySeen one way, the Labour leader has acted decisively and with principle. Seen another, he has reacted hastily to…
ByThe best position on Brexit after this week is not that it was right or wrong but that it…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByPhilip Green’s humbling should mark the end of an era of corporate recklessness – but for now, it has merely…
ByA new poem by Paul Bailey.
ByThe mogul’s retail empire has crumbled. Is it all his fault?
ByBoyd’s Trio, Nir’s Horse Crazy, Lafarge’s Life Without Air, and Asylum for Sale edited by McGuirk and Pine.
ByAndrew Marr's Elizabethans is a history of the British national spirit from 1953 to the present day.
ByObama is too comfortable in his own skin to make a revelatory biographer.
ByA courtroom drama about the meaning of lies – and “inaccuracies” on Netflix.
ByThe British author discusses the long shadow of the Norman Conquest – and how England never recovered from it.
ByTuberculosis led to the rise of modernist public architecture. What will our cities look like after Covid-19?
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThis Kristen Stewart-Mackenzie Davis romcom asks “What if Meet the Parents had been 90 per cent gayer?”
ByI know some people find this sort of thing, rope initials and all, comforting. But it doesn’t soothe me.
ByA new podcast from the Australian Broadcasting Company begins with a very simple premise: throughout the history of the…
ByAt a retreat centre that was once Buddhist, I realise the human yearning for religion can take us to…
ByNow more than ever, we should learn from our prehistoric ancestors’ reverence for the Earth.
ByThe government’s “build back better” narrative renders the pandemic an opportunity – but ignores the fact that prior to Covid-19, something…
ByDoes Rupert Murdoch tell his editors what to write? Did the late Robert Fisk make things up? Is objectivity…
ByThe Green Dragon! The years roll away with a crash, and suddenly it’s 1984 again, and I’m getting pickled.
ByFor the first time, the Oxford English Dictionary chose not to pick a Word of the Year – but Covid-19 has…
ByIn rejecting the League of Nations, the US turned away from the world – but the president-elect could change…
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare's Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain – has…
BySeen one way, the Labour leader has acted decisively and with principle. Seen another, he has reacted hastily to…
ByMy mentor, Peter Tate, dedicated his career to changing the poor culture of communication in medicine in the 1970s.
ByEmail emily.bootle@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's Subscriber of the Week.
ByThe publisher discusses the leaders of the French Revolution, watching Call My Agent and reading Charles Dickens.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByPhilip Green’s humbling should mark the end of an era of corporate recklessness – but for now, it has merely…
ByThe best position on Brexit after this week is not that it was right or wrong but that it…
By