
Ali Smith’s Goldsmiths Prize lecture: The novel in the age of Trump
When politics is built on fictions, it’s fiction that can help us get to truth.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
When politics is built on fictions, it’s fiction that can help us get to truth.
ByThe Labour MP talks Optimus Prime, The Only Way is Essex, and the fourth Industrial Revolution.
ByIt is a reflection of the human condition.
ByWhen I switched off the bedside light, everything went black.
ByHumankind has come a long way from caveman days.
ByBBC Radio 4 dramatises journalist John Reed's account of the Russian Revolution.
ByWhen the attacker began blankly spinning his lies in the interview room, you felt only numb.
ByThe film may be produced by Netflix, but it is deeply cinematic.
ByCharacters boldly sing about their psychological flaws and emotional dependencies.
ByJenny Erpenbeck's book underscores the logical inconsistencies of European border laws.
ByAn Odyssey shows that if any subject can dissolve their differences, it is Classics.
ByRachel Hewitt's book is fuelled by vim and vigour.
ByAuthor Robert Harris should know that less is more.
ByA new poem by Kathryn Simmonds.
ByFrancis O’Gorman believes the systematic devaluation of the past began in earnest in the 19th century.
ByIts message remains as defiant as ever.
BySuddenly there was a buzzing overhead, followed by two loud explosions. It was an IS drone, dropping grenades.
ByBut a contest, when it happens, must be swift.
ByHow the beleagured premier has been left exposed as the Tories are devastated by the Brexit plague.
ByThe group of Conservative backbenchers can determine a Tory leader’s fate before the electorate has a chance.
ByVoters want both freedom and security.
ByThe frontrunner to succeed Kezia Dugdale talks Brexit, manners and dangerous dogs.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe supreme court ruling was unprecedented in Africa.
ByInterrogating decision-makers is still what journalism needs to do.
ByHe might have been a rebel in parliament but he is a loyalist when it comes to his team.
ByHumans do not always make rational choices.
ByMany in her inner circle were disdainful of libertarian free market dogmas.
ByThe Nobel Prize-winning author's strange, restrained fictions are political in the best sense.
ByWe need new words to describe the political landscape, but “centrist” is deliberately vague – and therefore useless.
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