Pico in Purgatory

Erin Maglaque

Giovanni Pico​, count of Mirandola and Concordia, was 23 when he travelled to Rome to become an angel. It was 1487. Christendom’s most important priests would be there; the cleverest theologians would debate him. The pope would watch. Pico was going to dazzle them all. He planned to begin with a poetic, densely allusive speech, which almost no one would understand; then he would make...

 

Can cellos remember?

Thomas Laqueur

On​ 29 January this year, a cello made in 1730 by Nicolò Gagliano, a member of the famous Neapolitan dynasty of luthiers, stood in front of the European Parliament to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day. It had belonged to Pál Hermann, a Jewish Hungarian composer and virtuoso cellist who had studied under Kodály and Bartók and gave concerts throughout Western...

 

Britain’s Europe Problem

David Runciman

What was​ Nigel Farage before he was Reform UK, before he was the Brexit Party, before he was Ukip? Farage insists that he started out as a run-of-the-mill Tory – just another true-blue Thatcherite – until the Conservative Party’s craven attitude towards Europe made it impossible for him to keep the faith. Recollections vary, however. According to Michael Crick’s...

 

Erasing the Human Rights Act

Conor Gearty

It is extraordinary​ that the UK Supreme Court’s recent decision on the rights of trans people in For Women Scotland v. The Scottish Ministers completely ignores the impact of human rights law. The privacy rights of those who identify as having a gender different from the one they were assigned at birth have been jettisoned as a result of the court’s determination that the gender...

 

Computers that want things

James Meek

One day​ in March 2016, the young Go grandmaster Lee Sedol stepped away from the game he was playing against an artificial intelligence called AlphaGo. He wanted a cigarette. The Seoul Four Seasons Hotel, where the tournament was happening, had set aside its roof terrace for his exclusive use, and documentary cameras from the company that made AlphaGo, DeepMind, followed him there. On...

 

What Knox did next

Jessica Olin

Almost twenty years​ have passed since Amanda Knox, an American exchange student in Perugia, was arrested for the murder of her British housemate, Meredith Kercher, and it is nearly impossible, at this far remove, to convey the chaos that engulfed her. The lead prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini, pursued a case based on circumstantial evidence, gut instinct and his fantasies of female depravity,...

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Muriel Spark’s Wickedness

Colin Burrow

You can learn​ a lot about a person from the way they react to the death of a pet. The norm: uncontrollable sobbing, then mythologising its wonders and uniqueness. Perhaps after a few weeks you begin to hear its ghostly paws behind you. Then, after a decent interval, you get another one, not a replacement of the irreplaceable, of course, but to fill the void.

Muriel Spark loved her cat...

 

Audre Lorde’s Legacy

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor

Audre Lorde​ described herself as a ‘Black lesbian, mother, warrior, poet’; she was also a socialist, a writer, a teacher. But she is best known today for slogans taken from her poems, essays and speeches: ‘Your silence will not protect you’; ‘There is no hierarchy of oppression’; ‘The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s...

Short Cuts

China’s Gen Z

Yun Sheng

Young people​ in China have never lived in a world without the internet and many have had access to smart devices since childhood. Life offline is difficult for them to imagine. They are the most educated generation in history, but they are living through an economic slump following decades of high-speed growth. The vision of upward mobility has waned, replaced by the rat race (though many...

 

Asa Briggs says yes

Neal Ascherson

When Asa Briggs​ got a job at the University of Leeds, he and his wife bought what he considered an ‘imposing’ villa on the outskirts of the city. Waspishly, the historian A.J.P. Taylor described it as ‘like Asa himself, small, squat and full of Victorian bric-à-brac’. Of the four recent British giants of broad-gauge history, Adam Sisman has now studied three:...

 

Mélenchon’s Ambitions

David Todd

On​ 21 April 2002 Jean-Marie Le Pen became the first leader of a far-right party to reach the run-off of a French presidential election. France was astonished. For two weeks, daily anti-fascist demonstrations took place in cities and the mainstream media called on voters to re-elect the conservative Jacques Chirac. But the upsetting result proved a false alarm. Left-wing sympathisers held...

 

Self-Interpreting Animals

Stephen Mulhall

Charles Taylor​ has had a long, fêted career as a philosopher with a particular interest in bringing the French and German traditions into productive conversation with their Anglo-American counterparts, and in bringing political and ethical theorising to bear on contemporary politics both in the UK and in his country of birth, Canada: he was an active participant in the British New...

At the Institut du monde arabe

‘Trésors sauvés de Gaza’

Josephine Quinn

There was​ a fashion in the Bronze Age Levant for decorating hollow bones: take the femur or tibia of a cow, scoop out the mucky stuff, polish it up and scratch geometric patterns on it. The bone tube – as archaeologists call such objects – on display in Paris as part of the exhibition Trésors sauvés de Gaza: 5000 ans d’histoire (until 2 November) has a...

 

Susan Choi’s ‘Flashlight’

Blake Morrison

At the start​ of Flashlight, the main character, Louisa, is a stroppy ten-year-old. She’s sent to a child psychologist, Dr Brickner, on account of her misdeeds at school in California (‘defiance, disruptive behaviour, deception, peer-to-peer conflict, tardiness, truancy, larceny’), but quickly shuts him out: ‘I don’t like people asking me questions.’ He...

Diary

Interviewing Hitler

Patrick Cockburn

Norman Ebbutt​, Berlin correspondent for the Times, interviewed Hitler on 14 October 1930, soon after the Nazis had their first big breakthrough in the Reichstag elections. They met in a small, musty room ‘in a third or fourth-class hotel in a very grubby street’, which at the time was the Nazis’ advance headquarters in the capital. ‘I was led upstairs into a tiny...

Close Readings 2025

On the Close Readings podcast, longstanding LRB contributors explore a literary period or theme through a selection of key works.

Catch up on our four series running in 2025: Conversations in Philosophy, Fiction and the Fantastic, Love and Death, and Novel Approaches. New episodes are released every Monday.

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Adam Tooze to give the first LRB Autumn Lecture in NYC

He will speak on ‘Electrostates, Petrostates & the New Cold War’ at the New School on 27 October 2025 as the first in our new annual lecture series in the US.

Click the link to buy tickets.

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