Extra

Berlin Diary

Adam Shatz

On my first day as a fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, in the middle of January, one of the other new arrivals, a German woman who’s lived in the States for three decades, remarked that the view of Lake Wannsee was stunning from the dining room of the villa where the fellows stay, and would only be more beautiful in the spring. ‘As a Jew,’ another fellow replied,...

 

David Graeber’s Innovations

Richard Seymour

When​ David Graeber left academia in 2005, he had no intention of going back. His contract had been cancelled by Yale, supposedly after colleagues objected to his tardiness – though he suspected the real reason was that he had stood up for a student organiser whom the authorities wanted rid of. One of the brightest anthropologists of his generation, he scorned his peers on the way out....

 

Constance Marten’s Defiance

Clair Wills

Forseveral years, I have been following the case of Constance Marten and Mark Gordon, the couple who went on the run from social services and the police in January 2023, in order to prevent their baby girl being taken into care. Marten was raised in wealth and privilege: a large landed estate, acquaintance with royalty, private schools, trust funds. She had fallen out with her family,...

From the blog

Trumpists against Trump

Judith Butler

5 August 2025

Trump insists that the whole Epstein affair is a ‘hoax’ and that his own followers are ‘stupid’ and ‘weaklings’. Their reaction has been intense and swift, since Trump now sounds like the elitists who disparage them – elitists like Hillary Clinton, who called them ‘a basket of deplorables’. Trump scoffs at their complaints, noting that his supporters have nowhere else to go.

 

University English

Colin Kidd

Most​ UK-based academics who don’t work at Oxford or Cambridge have at some stage experienced the turbulence of university restructuring. In my case, it happened at the University of Glasgow in 2009. The twenty or so departments and research units in the Faculty of Arts were told to reconfigure themselves as four multidisciplinary super-schools. In the mating dance that followed I...

 

Assad and the Alawites

Loubna Mrie

On​ 6 March, a unit of the Syrian state police conducted a ‘combing operation’ in a village near the coastal city of Jableh. They were searching for local commanders loyal to the former regime of Bashar al-Assad, who they suspected were hiding out in the hills. When they got back to Jableh, the police were ambushed and at least sixteen killed. In response, Hay’at Tahrir...

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Satie against Solemnity

Jonathan Coe

In​ 1888, two soon to be famous composers completed their earliest significant works. In Leipzig, where he was employed as second conductor at the Stadttheater, Gustav Mahler put the finishing touches to what would later be known as his Symphony No. 1. These days performed as a four-movement work, it received its premiere in Budapest as a five-movement ‘symphonic poem’. When this...

 

On Resistance

Adam Phillips

The removal of resistances can mean the final loss of the individuality of the person concerned . . . It is really only the psychoanalysts who respect resistances and see in them the unconscious struggle of the person to find himself.

D.W. Winnicott, ‘Leucotomy’

Never before​ has the word ‘resistance’ felt at once more imperative and more difficult to imagine and...

 

In Evin Prison

Amir Ahmadi Arian

In​ the early morning of 23 June, the day before Iran and Israel agreed a ceasefire, Israel bombed Evin Prison in Tehran, killing at least 79 people. It was the deadliest attack on a single target during the twelve-day war. Evin seemed a strange place to choose. Many of its inmates are political dissidents, or foreign or dual-national prisoners accused of espionage; Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe...

 

Eimear McBride’s Method

Clare Bucknell

Minds and bodies​ are often at odds with each other in Eimear McBride’s novels. In The Lesser Bohemians (2016), the narrator, Eily, gets so anxious giving a blowjob that she makes her actor-boyfriend recite Richard III to get her through it:

Nowisthewinterofourdiscontentmadeglorioussummerbythissonofyork and allthecloudsthatloured upon our house inthedeepbosomofthe ocean   ...

 

Planet Phosphorus

James Vincent

Just six elements​ are always necessary for the formation of life as we know it: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulphur. Collectively, they are known by the clumsy, vaguely pharaonic acronym CHNOPS (though I prefer the more memorable SPONCH) and together they comprise 99 per cent of human body mass. Of these six ingredients, phosphorus is the least abundant and the most...

 

Ancient Coastlines

Josephine Quinn

The seaside​ was invented in the 18th century, along with freedom, fraternity and the rights of man. The beach was Britain’s contribution to modernity, a product of the Industrial Revolution and the rise of cities. A new interest in fresh air and exercise took hold, especially among the upper classes: labour took care of the bodies of their workers. Before that the coast was a source...

 

On Hallie Flanagan

Susannah Clapp

HallieFlanagan: a woman killed by Congress. Or at least by Congress-approved committee. From 1935 to 1939, Flanagan ran the most extraordinary of stage ventures, a dramatic instance of imagination spurred by political principle. The Federal Theatre Project, set up under FDR’s New Deal to give work to unemployed theatre practitioners, produced more than a thousand plays, estimated...

At the Musée Carnavalet

‘Le Paris d’Agnès Varda’

Jeremy Harding

‘Couple dans une gare parisienne’ (1959)

In​ 1959, the French monthly Réalités ran a piece by Bernard Frank, a precocious novelist and former protégé of Sartre, explaining that a lost generation of young bourgeois had found their bearings in existentialism. Post-occupation and post-Vichy, he argued, the model hero was an impoverished intellectual, the...

Short Cuts

What is the meaning of support?

David Renton

What does it mean when a government makes support for an organisation unlawful? Support is what a rank-and-file member of a party provides for its leader when they donate money to the cause, when they vote for that leader, when they tell their friends that she is the best candidate. But it can also be something much vaguer. The problem with the interpretation of the verb ‘support’...

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.

Read more about Close Readings 2025

LRB 45s

Were marking the paper’s 45th anniversary with a limited edition series of 45 rpm vinyl singles, drawing on our rich archive of poems.

Volume 1 contains ‘Byron at Sixty-Five’, a typically inventive and witty dramatic monologue by Edwin Morgan; ‘Requiem for Mohammad al-Dura’, an elegy by the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish; and ‘To 2040’, the title poem from Jorie Graham’s latest collection.

Read more about LRB 45s
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