• 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
14 February 2014

Stuart Hall

Clancy Sigal

Stuart Hall and I used to argue about jazz. He was a Miles Davis fan, and I was into the Modern Jazz Quartet. The third member of our late 1950s Universities and Left Review troika, Raphael Samuel, was more or less tone deaf except for folk. In the New Left’s early days Stuart and Raphael made a fabulous team: Stuart unfailingly courteous, cool, unflappable and – quite rare this on the left – with a terrific sense of humour.


Most Recent

Police Violence in Berlin

Harry Stopes

Police violence against demonstrators isn’t new. What is distinct in the Palestine case, however, is the consistent and cumulative use of almost...

On the Picket Line

Anna Aslanyan

On Monday morning, more than a hundred people formed a picket line outside one of the entrances to the British Library’s St Pancras building. ‘We...

Detrimental Outside Influence

Tom Stevenson

In its open aggression and territoriality, Trump’s second National Security Strategy is less duplicitous about US actions around the world than past...

Glitchcore Bosch

Mark Sinker

Above Côte Brasserie in Kingston upon Thames, overlooking its Riverside Walk, there was for a week in mid-November a very long billboard depicting...

No Kings

Neal Ascherson

England doesn’t know how to say: ‘No Kings.’ Instead, it says: ‘Not this one, but perhaps his brother or his son.’ All Windsor crises, from...
Contact
Email: blog@lrb.co.uk

Please enable Javascript

This site requires the use of Javascript to provide the best possible experience. Please change your browser settings to allow Javascript content to run.

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