03/09/2020 - 12:05am
The cringe of Right-wing celebrity-worship The Right can never out-celeb the Left, as the 'anti-Greta' demonstrates
Daniel Kalder
09.03
How political correctness went mad Standing for liberal values means defending opinions that we fundamentally disagree with
Tim Farron
06.03
‘Noughts + Crosses’ is an ugly work about racism The greatest flaw of the BBC drama is its deeply-dated understanding of British society
Douglas Murray
06.03
How kids’ books became universally woke Progressivism is the latest religion, and the children's publishing industry is cashing in
Ed West
06.03
Farewell free trade, and good riddance Even before coronavirus, economic nationalism was on the up
David Goodhart
06.03
What should I read my son? The powerful forces of gender-specific marketing steer boys towards dinosaur, truck and superhero literature
Tanya Gold
05.03
David Lammy’s double standards The Labour MP's new book criticises the tribalism of opponents while ignoring his own
Eric Kaufmann
05.03
In praise of uncynical children’s books Misanthropic tales may thrill kids, but it’s just nicer, sometimes, to read books by people who like people
Tom Chivers
05.03
How coronavirus plays into Trump’s hands The President uses the politics of the bathroom to make voters fearful of the other
Giles Fraser
04.03
Are humans heading for the knacker’s yard? In <i>A World Without Work</I>, Daniel Susskind hands us a collective P45. He can take it right back
Peter Franklin
04.03
What is the BBC worth? The licence fee is a relic from a long-gone age, and there are no good arguments left for keeping it
Maajid Nawaz
04.03
The joyful anachronism of kid lit Reading is a form of time-travel which allows folk memories to thrive
Sam Leith