If all the world’s a stage, maybe all the world’s a concept album too. Where does West End Girl begin or end? And why does it ...
With the great powers facing off and a global authoritarian slide, we are entering a new era of brazen propaganda. But for ...
My new year began not with resolutions, but with tentacled monsters menacing 1980s children and their trusted adults. At the ...
We talk to historian David Olusoga about revisiting the story of the Empire, religion in Britain – and why logic gets you ...
For many generations in societies shaped by Christianity, monogamy has been the almost undisputed champion of relationship norms. In Britain and the US, it has been held up as the dominant – really ...
Satire today is dominated by a narrow elite. No longer a threat to authority, it is a means for the establishment to protect itself. Paul Merton and Ian Hislop, illustrated as part of the set for the ...
This piece accompanies Marcus Chown's feature on the discovery of cosmic background radiation, from the Spring 2015 edition of New Humanist. Perhaps the most famous accidental discovery of all is ...
Drag: A British History (University of California Press) by Jacob Bloomfield It’s tempting to open this review by saying that drag – and particularly women’s clothing worn by men on stage for ...
Buddhism is often seen as the acceptable face of religion, lacking a celestial dictator and full of Eastern wisdom. But Dale DeBakcsy, who worked for nine years in a Buddhist school, says it's time to ...
In an era defined by “fake news”, public trust in institutions is increasingly under threat, along with our ability to discern fact from fiction. In the UK, 94 per cent of people say they have ...