
Leader: A Mad Max Brexit
Brexit won’t mean being “plunged into a Mad Max-style world”, according to David Davis.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Brexit won’t mean being “plunged into a Mad Max-style world”, according to David Davis.
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ByHistory suggests that when the educated masses feel their future has been stolen, revolutions happen.
ByFrightened, I shook my head. “Of course you do,” he grinned, opening the sack.
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ByRees-Mogg, in his pinstriped shirt, is a profoundly unserious man pretending to be serious.
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ByCraig Gillespie directs with all the subtlety of a baton-wielding thug but has made one brilliant decision in Margot…
ByDenis Johnson’s posthumous The Largesse of the Sea Maiden is not only remarkable as a document of a great…
ByPatrisse Khan-Cullors' harrowing and yet uplifting work demonstrates that collective organising is the only thing that has truly changed the…
ByGraham Robb’s The Debatable Land and Rory Stewart’s The Marches dig into the history and culture of the borderlands.
ByA new poem by Kathleen Winter.
ByFeel Free: Essays shows the limitations of a star literary career – and the freedom of a remarkable critical mind.
ByKatja Petrowskaja turns a venerable literature of commemorative, respectful wartime suffering on its head.
ByTo think of this book as any kind of scholarly exercise is a category mistake. The purpose of Pinker’s…
ByBusiness is booming in the tiny former British colony. But stories of corruption and assassination are filling the newspapers,…
ByIn ailing northern towns, amateur ice hockey brought violence and validation to a generation of young men.
ByAs the leader of the notorious Qods force, Soleimani was the key figure in Iran’s projection of military power…
ByFemale education can reduce population pressures, boost economic growth, curb infant mortality and improve child nutrition.
ByWomen should be empowered and supported within the industry, rather than being made to feel ashamed about their jobs.
By“As Jeremy listens to people, I’m sure he could change his mind,” says the pro-EU Corbynite.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By“We are going to look back at the past ten years and think of it as a lost decade.”
By“As teenagers, we know how to use social media and we know how to take advantage of it.”
ByDon’t expect the four-star general to stand up to his bullying, lying boss.
ByPlus, Wakanda has a border control system to make Theresa May swoon.
ByThe thing about kindness, for a start, is that everybody understands it.
ByThe founder of Souvenir Press lived a varied, fulfilling and, in many ways, thrilling life.
ByFor a minority of Labour MPs, Jeremy Corbyn’s growing hegemony and Tom Watson’s acquiescence are no laughing matter.
ByWe do too little to help the poorest ascend the education escalator to a life of more opportunity.
ByThe former Labour home secretary talks dystopian literature, Paul McCartney, and being a man of letters.
ByOne passenger likened his experience to watching a stand-up show.
ByThe room is silent and stuffy, but it’s filled with the ghosts of holidays past.
ByOne always wants what one does not have.
ByThe sound of a son calling his mother again and again, and the sound of her not answering.
ByPlaywright Christopher Shinn portrays America as a sick society which doesn’t even know it.
ByStar of the volunteer presenting pool on Classical Wandsworth is 20-something Caitlin Benedict.
ByShortly after the first Molotov cocktail is lobbed, the city is engulfed in flames and fury.
ByChannel 4's show, written and directed by Peter Kosminsky, has a horribly convincing veracity.
ByThe reality TV star introduced herself as “best known for too much bronzer and always being on a diet”.
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ByPreti Taneja's novel concerns the serving of justice – who gets what, as opposed to who deserves what.
ByMany of the pieces in eco-anthology Walking on Lava are as sad as they are angry.
ByA new poem by André Naffis-Sahely.
ByBiographer Chris Kraus restores Acker to her rightful place, by taking her writing seriously.
ByEmily Fridlund's Man Booker-longlisted novel is full of arresting detail.
ByNeuropsychologist Adrian Owen's work raises many more questions than it answers.
ByRichard Lloyd Parry's book explores the damage to a community that had “suffered an exceptional tragedy”.
ByDid popular authors write Islamic State into existence?
ByIn interviews, the chief political strategist compared himself to Darth Vader.
ByIt is time to reverse the damage done by Richard Beeching in the 1960s and reopen many of the…
ByHow this conflict – played out in the rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia – is destabilising the world.
BySuch weapons are already being developed by national militaries and terrorist groups.
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ByAuthor Walter Scheidel explains why violence is “the great leveller”.
ByWith its resemblance to “kiss”, it looks almost sweet – but it can cause genuine distress.
ByFor years now, the official Chinese position has been that no one was killed in Tiananmen Square.
ByTheir ongoing presence is complicity in the president's high crimes and misdemeanours.
ByThe First Minister admits that she wishes her party didn’t have the word “national” in its name.
ByAs many as a hundred women are believed to have left Britain for Isis territory since 2013.
ByThey could take both Corbyn and the present moment seriously. Instead, they are arguing about a clock.
ByWith every new attack – and the coverage that follows it – the threshold for violence is raised.
ByStatues have not been politicised by protest; they were always political.
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