The Clarksonification of the countryside
Also this week: AI enters the classroom, and the British obsession with gardening vs Brexit red tape.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Immerse yourself in the captivating world of literature with our collection of articles, offering literary analysis, book recommendations, author spotlights, and thought-provoking discussions that celebrate the written word.
Also this week: AI enters the classroom, and the British obsession with gardening vs Brexit red tape.
ByThe novelist on the threat to free speech, facing his attacker, and why writing Knife gave him back “the power”.
ByHis memoir Knife is a defence of free speech for a new age of intolerance. We should listen.
ByThe author behind American Fiction on rewriting Mark Twain, the evolution of racism, and his addiction to irony.
ByAlso this week: Underdressed in snowy New York, the beauty of book covers, and delighting in London’s diversity.
ByAs a former chair of the RSL, it is sad to see its mission being undermined by a new censoriousness.
ByHow the bluestockings used wit and learning to subvert a deeply misogynist culture.
ByWhy the 20th-century intellectual Ernesto de Martino believed that we should prepare for the apocalypse.
ByHow the violent upheavals of Seventies America helped forge the greatest historian of our time.
ByOn the tenth anniversary of the cultural theorist’s death an unpublished manuscript sheds new light on his thinking.
ByThe cultural analysis of a popular romantic story from an issue of Woman magazine.
ByWhy did the great novelist of female attraction create such misery in his marriages?
ByThe director of English PEN on the erosion of civil liberties, protecting free speech and calling for a ceasefire.
ByWriters exploit and rebel against their parents – but can never escape them.
ByFor readers and writers, novels require enormous effort. Why do we persist in seeking meaning in their pages?
ByAlso this week: the power of the Nativity, and why books are like batteries.
ByThe Booker Prize-winning author on political fiction, the refugee crisis and the “unmistakable” timeliness of his dystopian novel Prophet Song.
ByIn The Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor Dostoevsky dares to ask the question few will: do people truly desire freedom?
ByNew Statesman writers and guests choose their favourite reading of the year.
ByThe judging panel hasn’t picked an exciting winner in years because there simply hasn’t been one.
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