From the next issue

Before 1776

Rebecca Solnit

The​ first thing you see at Virgil Ortiz’s exhibition Continuum: Blindfall, First Strike, at the Vladem Contemporary branch of the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe (until 18 October), is a monumental head on a pedestal. The head has a band of black across the eyes, a row of five topknots marching from forehead to nape, and a pattern of spikes on a looped line across the hairless...

From the blog

Foul Means

James Butler

8 July 2026

The dodgy financing, the undeclared cash and the association with a flagrant crook could permanently tarnish Farage’s vaunted anti-establishment credentials. We all reach for the familiar when we’re desperate, and for Farage that means engineering a ‘people v. the establishment’ by-election.

 

Burnham’s Political Economy

William Davies

Britain’s present​ economic bind began in the winter of 2021-22. The success of the vaccine roll-out over the previous months had made it possible to ‘reopen’ the economy, even in areas such as hospitality whose entire future had once looked uncertain. But bottlenecks in supply chains and labour markets then exerted an upward pressure on prices, including wages....

From the archive

World Cup Wallcharts

Simon Skinner

The World Cup​, launched in 1930, is the most popular sporting event on the planet: one of Fifa’s less implausible recent claims is that 1.5 billion people watched the 2022 final in Lusail. Football, as Jonathan Wilson has done as much as any football writer to demonstrate, matters in multiple dimensions, but the World Cup has a magnetism all its own, drawing in millions who...

 

Celia Paul’s Ghosts

Marina Warner

 

Celia Paul’sMy Mother and God, from 1990, shows Paul’s mother, the obsessive subject of her art, against a louring cloud of thickly layered black and brown paint; at the top of the canvas, a glow of gold gives a promise of sunrise. The head seems to float in the lower half of the painting, an apparition in a welter of night; the eyes are lowered and the face turned to...

 

British Communist Art

Owen Hatherley

Taking​ British Communist art seriously means, to a degree at least, taking British Communism seriously. This is difficult to do when looking at Viscount Hastings’s mural from 1935, The Worker of the Future Clearing Away the Chaos of Capitalism, in what is now the Marx Memorial Library in Clerkenwell. The library is a 1960s reconstruction of an 18th-century school, which by the early...

Diary

In Venezuela

Armando Ledezma

As I waited​ for José in the only bodega within hours of the desert, a boy arrived on a pink bicycle. The cashier asked whether he was Venezuelan or Colombian. After more questioning, and a long silence, he realised that the boy, who looked about seven and was covered in powder from the salt plains, didn’t understand Spanish but rather spoke one of the area’s several...

 

On Malachi Whitaker

Tess Little

‘Ihave no journalistic ability,’ Malachi Whitaker wrote in her memoir, And So Did I (1939), ‘and could not tell a good story to save my life.’ By this point she had published four collections of short stories with Jonathan Cape. In a review of her first book, Frost in April (1929), Vita Sackville-West called her a ‘born writer’ and praised her stories as...

 

Jules Verne’s Fantasy

Raymond N. MacKenzie

By the last decades​ of the 19th century, Jules Verne was less a writer than a brand – one carefully cultivated by his publisher, Pierre-Jules Hetzel – promising a specific mixture of scientific plausibility, adventure and moral instruction. ‘Jules Verne’ told readers roughly what they would get: a journey, maps, technological marvels, diagrams, rational wonder. A...

 

Likeable Michael Longley

Seamus Perry

Michael Longley​ died a year and a half ago, at which point, as Auden put it in his elegy for Yeats, ‘he became his admirers.’ As happens with any great poet, what those admirers had long appreciated as a succession of fine individual poems and volumes unobtrusively reorganised itself into the completed order of a life’s work. Perhaps some foreshadowing of this process was...

 

Pedantry

Colin Burrow

This is what​ ‘Listen up’ sounds like when translated into pedantese: ‘Why, you brute nebulons, have you had my corpusculum so long among you, and cannot yet tell how to edify an argument? Attend and throw your ears to me, for I am gravidated with child till I have indoctrinated your plumbeous cerebrosities.’ So speaks one of the earliest representations of the pedant...

 

Margaret Busby’s Books

Christine Okoth

One​ of the prized possessions in Margaret Busby’s childhood home in Ghana was a steel-grey transistor radio. For much of the year she and her siblings attended boarding school in England, but during the holidays the radio connected her to ‘other cultures, other musics’. In an essay written for the Radio 3 programme Free Thinking in 2008, now reprinted as ‘The Joy of...

At MOWAA

Nigeria’s New Museum

Adéwálé Májà-Pearce

The new MOWAA building in Benin City.

Given​ Nigeria’s rich cultural heritage – Nok, Igbo Ukwu, Ìfẹ́, Benin – it’s not surprising that it has 53 national museums, although it’s hard to say how many are currently functioning. In 1996 I visited the Owo Museum in Ondo State, attached to one of the oldest palaces in West Africa, only to be told by the...

 

Jacobite Plotting

Colin Kidd

The​ defining characteristics of our political system – a parliamentary monarchy in a union-state – emerged in the course of two fraught decades at the turn of the 18th century, between the so-called Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the Treaty of Union between England and Scotland in 1707. The revolution of 1688 was glorious largely because – unlike the earlier revolution in...

 

Catherine of Braganza

Alice Hunt

In her​ early 15th-century conduct book for women, Christine de Pizan advised a princess, not yet married, to ‘love her husband and live in peace with him, or otherwise she will have already discovered the torments of hell’. Tough advice for the 23-year-old Portuguese Infanta, Catherine of Braganza. Soon after her arrival at the Restoration court in 1662, as the wife of Charles...

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