Section: Series

Total Results: 220


Gallic spectators prefer slow, classical cape-work. Pascal Guyot/AFP/ Getty Images
07/12/2022 - 1:00am

France, the last bastion of bullfighting Bull's blood flows in unexpected places

John Lewis-Stempel

Monday, July 11

11.07

Italy’s corrupt beach politics Public property is exploited for private gain

Tobias Jones

Tuesday, May 3

03.05

The ghost of Blair haunts Sedgefield New Labour's birthplace is politically adrift

Tanya Gold

Saturday, April 30

30.04

Is Tony Blair Labour’s future? New Labour's legacy is finally becoming clear

John McTernan

Wednesday, December 29

29.12

It’s not the end of the world Fantasies of decline can make you powerless

Oliver Bateman

Monday, December 27

27.12

Ernst Jünger: our prophet of anarchy The dissident thinker predicted our disordered times

Aris Roussinos

Friday, December 24

24.12

Dickens hated Oliver Twist The Victorians virtue-signalled their way out of caring about poverty

Will Lloyd

Monday, December 20

20.12

The unbearable lightness of being cancelled Milan Kundera introduced us to the Devil's laughter

Howard Jacobson

Thursday, December 16

16.12

What Brexiteers get wrong about empire It is better to be woke than dead

Ferdinand Mount

Saturday, September 11

11.09

The war on Martin Amis His response to the attacks was a quixotic and disastrous battle against Islamism

Will Lloyd

Thursday, September 9

09.09

Why Afghan women are fighting back America has betrayed the one positive legacy of 9/11

Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Wednesday, September 8

08.09

How 9/11 created the surveillance state We were promised an era of heroism — so where did it all go wrong?

Jacob Siegel