There wasn’t anything inevitable about David Cameron’s rise. If Kenneth Clarke had stirred himself into running something like a campaign when competing for the leadership with Iain...

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Into the Big Tent: Fredric Jameson

Benjamin Kunkel, 22 April 2010

Fredric Jameson’s pre-eminence, over the last generation, among critics writing in English would be hard to dispute. Part of the tribute has been exacted by his majestic style, one...

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Living with Monsters: PMs v. the Media

Ferdinand Mount, 22 April 2010

One of the odder political books I have read is The Abuse of Power, by James Margach, the veteran lobby correspondent of the Sunday Times. Published in 1978, the book was subtitled with a...

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Cameron’s Crank: ‘Red Tory’

Jonathan Raban, 22 April 2010

It’s been a quarter-century since I last listened to The Archers on Radio 4, so I’m out of touch. I read in the papers that Phil Archer, or at least Norman Painting, who played him,...

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It has become a commonplace to say, in the aftermath of the Great Recession, that ‘we are all Keynesians now.’ If this is so, then Keynes’s great biographer, Robert Skidelsky,...

Read more about The Non-Existent Hand: How to Save Capitalism

Blahspeak: Aspiration etc…

Stefan Collini, 8 April 2010

Historians have a taste for labels that capture the character or spirit of a period – The Bleak Age, The Age of Equipoise or, in a recent work on the interwar period, The Morbid Age. It...

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Salute! ‘Bomb Power’

Stephen Holmes, 8 April 2010

The president of the United States now for 50 years is followed at all times, 24 hours a day, by a military aide carrying a football that contains the nuclear codes that he would use, and be...

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Naderland: Ralph Nader’s novel

Jackson Lears, 8 April 2010

In certain precincts of American political culture, the mere mention of the name Ralph Nader still provokes scowls. Many Democrats remain convinced that Nader’s presidential campaign in...

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Short Cuts: The Armenian Genocide

Mark Mazower, 8 April 2010

American Samoa, a tiny remnant of old-fashioned gunboat diplomacy in the Pacific, is permitted to send a single member to the House of Representatives in Washington. He is not allowed to vote on...

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Much of the tale is conveyed by the covers. A sad, thoughtfully dithering photo of the prime minister fronts What Went Wrong, Gordon Brown? The cover of Christopher Harvie’s book features a...

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Unhappy Yemen: In Yemen

Tariq Ali, 25 March 2010

I left for Yemen as Obama was insisting that ‘large chunks’ of the country were ‘not fully under government control’, after Senator Joseph Lieberman had cheerfully...

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The Way Things Are and How They Might Be: An Interview

Tony Judt and Kristina Božič, 25 March 2010

Europeans fell in love with Obama even before he became president. At the same time we are hardly aware of who our new president is, the president of the EU. The feelings aren’t reciprocal,...

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Red v. Yellow: Thailand

Joshua Kurlantzick, 25 March 2010

In recent decades, Thailand has been running one of the world’s most successful national marketing campaigns. Building on its reputation for hospitality, beautiful beaches and splendid food,...

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Short Cuts: Michael Foot

Chris Mullin, 25 March 2010

Of all the many tributes to Michael Foot it was David Cameron who hit the nail on the head. He was, Cameron said, ‘almost the last link to a more heroic age in politics’. In...

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Enabler’s Revenge: John Edwards

David Runciman, 25 March 2010

Along with a good lawyer, an agent and a PR representative, celebrity miscreants now need an enabler: the person who indulged them in their vices and so can be blamed for failing to get them to...

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Fanfares, ticker-tape parades and pompom-wielding cheerleaders failed to greet the news that the UK economy grew by 0.1 per cent in the quarter-year to December. That’s as it should be,...

Read more about The Great British Economy Disaster: A Very Good Election to Lose

As a result of mounting anti-semitism in Europe and the generally poor showing of Israeli hasbara there, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Education are sending a delegation of...

Read more about Hasbara: Israel’s ‘Public Diplomacy’

When Amy Bishop was hired by the University of Alabama in Huntsville seven years ago, she appeared to have everything going for her: she was young, Harvard-trained, passionate about her field, a...

Read more about Short Cuts: The Short Career of Amy Bishop