Analogies with 20th-century fascism are not particularly helpful for understanding our times, but one parallel is instructive: it is not ‘ordinary people’ who decide they’ve had enough of democracy; it is elites, and economic elites in particular. Blackshirts marched on Rome, but Mussolini arrived by sleeper car from Milan because the leading strata of the Italian state had invited him to govern. People today also often take their cues from business leaders, in particular a pop culture figure like Musk. All the self-serving talk of ‘disruption’ can be adapted to make Trump acceptable, as can the studied neutrality of oligarchs who not only own their own rockets, but their own newspapers: refusing to endorse Harris sends a signal that it’s rational to be intimidated by Trump.    

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29 October 2024

We are not OK

Selma Dabbagh

Over a million people have protested in London this year and a majority of the British population think the Israeli prime minister should be arrested for war crimes, yet the UK government continues to prostrate itself before Israel.

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25 October 2024

At the Berlin Staatsoper

Olivia Giovetti

Anna Netrebko as Abigaille, ensemble and choir in the Berlin Staatsoper’s new production of Verdi’s ‘Nabucco’. Photo © Bernd Uhlig

When Verdi’s Nabucco was first performed in 1842, Milanese audiences were quick to see their own situation under Austrian occupation reflected in the plot, a loose adaptation of the Biblical story of the madness of Nebuchadnezzar and the plight of the exiled Judeans in Babylon.

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23 October 2024

The Stone and the Unicorn

Sally Davies

Trojan Unicorn by Becky Minto (designer), Scott Bisset (build and design) and Kate Bonney (Lighting designer). Photo by Bart Masiukiewicz

The first person to grasp the marketing potential of the unicorn seems to have been King James I of Scotland. Kidnapped by the English as an 11-year-old in 1406, he wasn’t released for eighteen years. When he assumed the throne, he placed a pair of rampant unicorns on his new coat of arms. 

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22 October 2024

Par for the Coarsening

Ian Patterson

Jilly Cooper makes an all too fleeting appearance in the TV adaption of her novel ‘Rivals’.

It’s always a shock when imagined characters from novels are given a kind of reality by TV actors. Everybody has their own idea of Mr Darcy or Leopold Bloom, Mrs Dalloway or Emma Bovary, and most incarnations will upset somebody. It does seem perverse, though, to change as much about the characters’ appearance as Disney’s adaptation of Jilly Cooper’s best novel, Rivals, has done. 

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18 October 2024

The Post-Zionist Jew

Eli Zaretsky

Many Jews today feel torn. On the one hand, they feel loyalty to Israel, the land of their fellow Jews, many of whom were driven to that country by persecution. On the other hand, they recognise that Israel has been committing crimes against humanity, which are essentially racially driven. They want to oppose Israel’s wars, but they want to do it as Jews. Is there a specifically Jewish way to address this conflict? I believe there is.

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15 October 2024

Pilots of the Caribbean

Colin Douglas

Julian Marryshow (right) and colleagues of 602 Spitfire Squadron, Sumburgh, January 1943. Photo © Royal Air Force Museum

Six weeks after the start of the Second World War, the British government lifted the colour bar on military recruitment. But the announcement, on 19 October 1939, made clear that the change in policy would last only for the duration of the war. The air force recruited six thousand West Indians. The army and navy, however, claimed that Black people could not meet their high standards for entry.

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