
How fear and feeling took over modern politics
Exploring the role played by negative emotions in recent history.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Exploring the role played by negative emotions in recent history.
ByThe technology benefits everyone, which then erodes the advantage of controlled thinking – for instance, by the over-consumption of food.
ByChina’s leader points to external enemies but his biggest problems are at home.
ByIt is corroding the consensual power-sharing paradigm engendered in Northern Ireland by the Good Friday Agreement.
ByCod, carp, eel, herring and salmon might seem an odd quintet, but these charismatic, story-rich species changed our nation.
ByHelen Lewis, Linda Grant, Kate Maltby, Sarah Ditum, Janice Turner & Caroline Criado Perez on the strengths and weaknesses of…
ByBoyd’s career consists of an endless flow of stories in the great realist tradition, with strong plots, well-rounded characters,…
ByDunn talks to women about, well, everything: sex, love, bodies, identity, marriage, motherhood, politics, ageing, work, freedom and money.
ByProvocative tone and complex form triumph in new stagings of Harold Pinter’s 20 short plays.
ByAfter ten years of wrongheaded and brutal spending cuts, Keynes’s warning that bad economics produces political extremism is more…
ByGrant represents a very human set of contradictions. In his songs, horrific experiences are set alongside transcendent ones; cynicism…
ByHow public services from libraries and youth clubs to benefits and social care have been affected.
ByRachel Cooke reviews Doctor Who and A Dangerous Dynasty: House of Assad.
ByHow amazing it was that 40 years after the death of this man, people were using him for advertisements.
ByIt’s hard to discern Damien Chazelle’s motive for making this Neil Armstrong biopic, his first film since La La…
ByAfter more than a decade in which I counted down the minutes to a new episode, I encountered the…
ByFaced with the political and economic cost of spending cuts, even the Conservatives are being forced to retreat.
ByOver five days, the historian Andrew Roberts condenses some of his new book’s 1,152 pages into five essays that…
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe call is plaintive, at times, sometimes rising in excitement, persistent enough to be an integral part of the twilight…
ByI was opposed to beards, until a most excellent woman asked if I’d grow a goatee. For her.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByNo one wants to become a slave to a past self. And there comes a point when glossy black hair is at…
ByKnown locally as the “Valley Soldiers”, the users are buff men with an image-conscious lifestyle centred around the gym,…
ByGloomy MPs fear the PM will promise an end to cuts as Philip Hammond delivers yet more of them.
ByThe children’s author talks Victorian fairy hoaxes, a world without emails, and books about the NHS.
ByHorrifying, mysterious and sentient, our guts are the link between life and death – and if we understood their power…
ByNo politician dares advocate higher fuel taxes, restrictions on airline travel or meat rationing.
ByIn Britain, both left and right are culpable. Jeremy Corbyn denounces the “mainstream media” in speeches, just as Donald Trump does.
ByOver the past decade, Swift has navigated a changing political climate with considerable, if decreasing, deftness.
By