Why is it, when Islamism has damaged the image of Islam so comprehensively, that the faith seems to retain a huge popularity?
Geoffrey Gorer, anthropologist of Englishness, once remarked that “though most English men and women cannot ‘let themselves go’, they love to think and read about people who do throw off inhibitions, ...
England, tutted fifteenth-century Frenchmen, is where they kill their kings. Though the comment’s smug self-satisfaction ...
James Rebanks, the Lake District shepherd turned bestselling author, made his name writing about the rhythms and realities of ...
The Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita: ancient Indian texts that challenge Western categories, yet influenced the course of ...
For decades the so-called New York School of painters – associated chiefly with abstract expressionism – has been synonymous ...
Ahead of next year’s centenary of The Great Gatsby, the inevitable revisiting of Fitzgerald gets under way. Two new ...
The whorehouse of thought” is how Claude Vignon, a journalist in Balzac’s Lost Illusions (1837–43), describes newspapers.
After an exchange with Brian Vickers relating to disputed questions of dramatic collaboration I had researched with Laurie ...
A mission to revive publishing in the once-dominant language ...
Editors and writers join Lucy Dallas and Alex Clark to talk through the week's issue. Subscribe for free via iTunes, Spotify and other podcast platforms ...