Gold-Digger: Walter Ralegh

Colin Burrow, 8 March 2012

The OED suggests that the word ‘star’ was not used of ‘a person of brilliant reputation or talents’ until the 19th century. Nonetheless Sir Walter Ralegh (1554-1618)...

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Short Cuts: The Falklands

Jenny Diski, 8 March 2012

I can’t say that I’ve ever had a strong opinion – or any opinion – about Sean Penn. I may have watched a film he was in, and I booked but didn’t get as far as the...

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Outfox them! Stalin v Emigrés

Sheila Fitzpatrick, 8 March 2012

The Soviet Union claimed leadership of the world revolution in the 1920s and 1930s – not surprisingly, since of all the European upheavals at the end of the First World War, theirs was the...

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Hyper-Retaliation: The Levant

Charles Glass, 8 March 2012

‘A man may find Naples or Palermo merely pretty,’ James Elroy Flecker, one-time British vice-consul in Beirut, wrote in October 1914, ‘but the deeper violet, the splendour and...

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Stardom: Explorers of the Nile

Megan Vaughan, 8 March 2012

In the final episode of the TV series Joanna Lumley’s Nile, Joanna Lumley stretches out next to the muddy dribble that is apparently the furthest source of the White Nile, deep in the...

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‘Nice story’, Freud says when Jung gives him an account of a patient’s pathology. The tone is amused, but a sense of shock lingers, an ironically disguised disapproval of...

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Who’s in, who’s out? The Nonproliferation Complex

Campbell Craig and Jan Ruzicka, 23 February 2012

Nuclear weapons have given rise to a multibillion-pound industry: the nonproliferation complex.

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Here Be Fog: Mapping the American West

J.H. Elliott, 23 February 2012

The history of the 13 mainland colonies, once a straightforward story of a settler population moving towards maturity, has become infinitely more complex.

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Shaving-Pot in Waiting: Victoria’s Albert

Rosemary Hill, 23 February 2012

Between 1845 and 1861 Victoria’s husband, Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, was largely responsible for setting the tone, pace and scope of the monarchy.

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Homer Inc

Edward Luttwak, 23 February 2012

Why are our contemporaries so keen on buying and presumably reading the Iliad’s Iron Age reminiscence of Bronze Age combat?

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As Manning Clark became a public figure, his work came to epitomise, in the eyes of his conservative critics, the ‘black armband’ school of history.

Read more about Cursing and Breast-Beating: Manning Clark’s Legacy

Death in Florence

Charles Nicholl, 23 February 2012

Andrea del Castagno was one of the greatest Florentine painters of the Quattrocento. But was he also a murderer?

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Sino-Americana

Perry Anderson, 9 February 2012

Books about China, popular and scholarly, continue to pour off the presses. In this ever expanding literature, there is a subdivision that could be entitled ‘Under Western Eyes’. The...

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Gruesomeness is my policy: German Colonialism

Richard J. Evans, 9 February 2012

Dotted around the world, there are still a few reminders of the fact that, between the 1880s and the First World War, Germany, like other major European powers, possessed an overseas colonial...

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Oh! – only Oh! Burne-Jones

Ruth Bernard Yeazell, 9 February 2012

Edward Jones – the Burne came later – was born in Birmingham to a mother who died giving birth to him and a father who eked out a living as a frame-maker, although art, his son...

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My son has been poisoned! Cold War movies

David Bromwich, 26 January 2012

‘They’re not going to stop,’ Joe McCarthy said of the Communists. ‘It’s right here with us now. Unless we make sure there’s no infiltration of our government,...

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Gaslight and Fog: Sherlock Holmes

John Pemble, 26 January 2012

‘Who cares who killed Roger Ackroyd?’ snapped Edmund Wilson, writing in the New Yorker in 1945. He refused to find out who did, because he’d already discovered that Agatha...

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Short Cuts: Carlos the Jackal

Colin Smith, 26 January 2012

A week before Christmas, Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, better known as Carlos the Jackal and already serving life for three murders, was given another life sentence at the Palais de Justice...

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