• My Account
  • Sign in
  • Menu
  • Search
  • The Paper
  • Subjects
  • Blog
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Newsletters

London Review of Books

Subscribe
Close

More search Options

  • Advanced search
  • Search by contributor
  • Browse our cover archive

Browse by Subject

  • Arts & Culture
  • Biography & Memoir
  • History & Classics
  • Literature & Criticism
  • Philosophy & Law
  • Politics & Economics
  • Psychology & Anthropology
  • Science & Technology
Close
Close
AcceptClose
Close
Close
    • My Account
    • ·
    • Sign out
    • Sign in
  • Newsletters
  • Home
  • The Paper
    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
    • Contributors
    • About the LRB
  • Subjects
    • Arts & Culture
    • Biography & Memoir
    • History & Classics
    • Literature & Criticism
    • Philosophy & Law
    • Politics & Economics
    • Psychology & Anthropology
    • Science & Technology
  • Blog
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
    • Bookshop
    • LRB Store
    • Close Readings
  • Subscribe
Close

More search Options

  • Search by contributor
  • Browse our cover archive

Browse by Subject

  • Arts & Culture
  • Biography & Memoir
  • History & Classics
  • Literature & Criticism
  • Philosophy & Law
  • Politics & Economics
  • Psychology & Anthropology
  • Science & Technology
LRB blog
  • Blog Contributors
  • Blog Archive
10 April 2018

‘What it is to hate’

Stephen W. Smith remembers Winnie Mandela

In apartheid South Africa, ‘the enemy’ was ever present, day and night, from the public toilets you couldn’t use to the neighbourhood you couldn’t live in, by way of police raids at first light to check on your bedfellows, or simply to keep you terrified. When Winnie Madikizela-Mandela – who died on 2 April at the age of 81 – spoke of ‘the enemy’, the words had an intimate ring.


Most Recent

Trumpists against Trump

Judith Butler

Donald Trump has alienated a good number of his MAGA supporters by seeking to suppress the full disclosure of the Jeffrey Epstein files. Are his…

Compensatory Puffing

Nicholas Hopkinson

The main component of cigarette filters is a plastic, cellulose acetate, and trillions of butts are discarded into the environment every year, making…

LRB 45s

Sam Kinchin-Smith

Why is the London Review of Books putting out records? We liked the idea of marking the paper’s 45th anniversary with a series of 45 rpm vinyl…

On the Dunes

Jenny Turner

I don’t suppose Donald Trump or Keir Starmer saw the row of flags, black, white and green with a red triangle, on a high dune near the Trump…

Against Consensus

Olivia Giovetti

During the curtain call for the closing performance of Verdi’s Il trovatore at the Royal Opera House on 19 July, one of the cast, Danni Perry, took…
Contact
Email: blog@lrb.co.uk

About

  • About the LRB
  • Subscribe
  • Publication schedule
  • Advertise with us
  • Bookshop
  • Jobs

Help

  • Contact us
  • The LRB app
  • For librarians
  • Accessibility
  • FAQs

Follow Us

  • Bluesky
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
London Review of Books
© LRB (London) Ltd 1980 - 2025. All rights reserved.
ISSN 0260-9592
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy
Back To Top