John Mitchinson explores what the novelist behind a 1759 masterpiece can teach us about the importance of marketing as a publisher
Literature
Martin Shaw looks at Goodwin's new book and its claims that Britain is run by a ‘woke’ new elite
We must all examine our values and actions in relation to vulnerable populations, writes Iain Overton
Stefano Goodman explains how impairment can lead to sudden physical reliance on strangers – and how this shapes our personalities
If voters can't be scared by the threat of the 'woke left' devaluing their house – they might be scared by it devaluing their childhood, writes Graham Williamson
The decision to alter Roald Dahl's texts to make them more inclusive misses the mark – and ignores wider failures of diversity in children's publishing, writes Sian Norris
Plenty of people like to claim "1984" - but who deserves it?
‘As sure as guns is guns, if we let in coloured labour, they’ll swallow us. They hate us. All the other colours hate the white. And they’re only waiting till we haven’t got the pull over them. They’re only waiting. And then what about poor little Australia?’
In 1741, the exalted members of the Bordeaux Royal Academy of Sciences met to consider sixteen essays written in response to the following question: ‘What is the physical cause of the Negro’s color, the quality of [the Negro’s] hair, and the degeneration of both [Negro hair and skin]?’
On a Sunday in the summer of 1970, we were all herded up to the little church in Cúil Aodha for Mass. We were city kids sent to this small and remote village in County Cork to learn Irish from the native speakers. Their little chapel was gray, pebble-dashed, with no steeple, more like a […]
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