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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Hail to The Chief

The US mid-term elections are the most important in recent history and not just for Americans. Since 1788, Australia has…

Australian Columnists

Simon Collins

Simon Collins

I don’t know if media coverage of the Geoffrey Rush defamation trial boosted Australian cinema attendances for last week’s simulcast…

Brown Study

Brown study

There was an undesirable intervention this week into the debate about African gangs in Melbourne, namely that a judge thought…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Labor’s quagmire of incompetence

A standard political tactic (of all sides) is to paint your opponents as inhumane or wreckers and wilful destroyers of…

Features Australia

And then there was one…

Exit, stage right, Ross Cameron.   Sky TV has fired its second Outsiders host. This time the charge was racism and…

Features Australia

Australians do support recognising Jerusalem

The brouhaha that followed the federal government’s announcement that Australia will consider moving Australia’s Israeli embassy to Jerusalem continues to…

Features Australia

Hollow man of the Left

There are two types of people in political parties. One type joins a party because he or she thinks that…

Features Australia

Milo’s hope and the Latin pope

There’s a long tradition in this country of washed-up troupers from overseas turning up on our shores for a gig,…

Features Australia

Trump, guns and Gab

When Robert Bowers entered the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh and gunned down eleven Jewish victims, his purpose was…

Features

Features

Brexit is served – and neither option is palatable

When the Lisbon Treaty was signed in 2007, the inclusion of Article 50 was hailed as a concession to British…

Features

Decline and fall: why America always thinks it’s going the way of Rome

For a millennium and a half now, one of the great pleasures of being a commentator on current affairs has…

Features

Standing in front of my great-uncle’s grave, we thought: I’m so sorry it took us so long

The story is part of family lore. How, during the Battle of Mons, on 23 August 1914, two long columns…

Features

Everything is now an Instagram photo op

On Sunday morning, in Puy-en-Velay, I climbed the 275 volcanic steps to the tiny chapel of Rocher Saint-Michel d’Aiguilhe. There,…

Features

Is Emmanuel Macron having a meltdown?

Emmanuel Macron was elated when France won the World Cup in July. The photograph of him leaping out of his…

Features

The National Student Survey is having a terrible effect on academia

Should university students really feel ‘satisfied’? Or would we rather they felt challenged? For the honchos of higher education, the…

Everything always tastes so much better in a car

Notes on...

The guilty pleasure of the McDonald’s drive-thru

My wife and I have a set routine after landing back at Gatwick. We collect our bags, clear customs and…

The Week

Leading article

What the UK can learn from the US midterms

Donald Trump can, at the very least, claim to have killed off political apathy. Americans this week voted in greater…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: The US midterms, Theresa May’s Brexit plan and London’s murder rate

Home Theresa May, the Prime Minister, set off for St Symphorien Military Cemetery in Mons, from which she was to…

Diary

Tim Laurence’s diary: how Macron broke a gentleman’s agreement for Remembrance Sunday

How on earth should one do it? How should the centenary of the end of a war be marked? Not…

Barometer

How many restaurants have actually gone bust?

It is cricket The use of a baseball expression, backstop, for possible arrangements over the Irish border could upset some…

From The Archives

Giving thanks

From ‘Thanks be to God’, 16 November 1918: The thought that filled the mind of the nation on Monday, and…

Letters

Tony Abbott is wholly misplaced about WTO Brexit

Hubris and nemesis Sir: Douglas Murray’s assessment of Angela Merkel’s decision to stand down as German Chancellor (‘Europe’s empty throne’,…

Columnists

World Politics

The lesson of the midterms? Trump’s crudeness works

 Washington, DC President Donald J. Trump thinks only in terms of winning and losing. On Tuesday, he won and he…

Rod Liddle

Why I’ve changed my name

As someone who has recently discovered he is black, I have watched with incredulity the treatment doled out by the…

Matthew Parris

Is there a moral difference between an NDA and blackmail?

Reader, may I call you John? Now imagine, John, that you are my employer and I know (or claim) that…

Lionel Shriver

Trump is right about many things, which is why he must be stopped

At my lecture in Sheffield last week, the final question in an otherwise temperate Q&A was antagonistic. My last Spectator…

Any other business

History will judge UK ministers harshly for the Irish backstop

We may or may not hear news soon of a settlement of the Irish border issue that will allow Brexit…

The Spectator's Notes

My great-grandfather’s personal remembrance day

The sixth of November 1918 was remembrance day for my great-grandfather, Norman Moore. It was the fourth anniversary of the…

Books

Lead book review

Books of the year – part one

Andrew Motion Short stories seem to fare better in the US than the UK, and among this year’s rich crop,…

Members of the Women’s Royal Australian Naval Service (WRANS) celebrate Armistice Day, 1918 in London

Books

Celebrating the 1918 Armistice resulted in thousands more deaths

Reflecting on the scenes of celebration, the ‘overpowering entrancements’, that he had witnessed in November 1918 on the first Armistice…

Levison Wood. Credit Simon Buxton

Books

Boys’ Own adventures in the war-torn Middle East

Ask most people whether they fancy a four-month, 5,000-mile trek across the Middle East and they might conclude you need…

Jean-François Raffaelli’s view of one of Haussmann’s boulevards in 1900. Credit Getty Images

Books

Baron Haussmann: the man who set Paris straight

Rupert Christiansen’s City of Light opens on the evening of 5 January 1875, with the inauguration of Paris’s new opera…

Alesso Baldovinetti’s ‘Madonna and Child’ (c. 1464) is rich in symbolism. The infant Christ holds his swaddling band up to the Virgin’s womb, as if it were a token of the umbilical cord that united them. The winding shape of the bandage is echoed in the distant meandering river. The Madonna’s gossamer veil falls over her head as a pyx-cloth might cover a sacramental vessel.The child touches another translucent veil, draped over the cushion beside him. Towering above him, his Mother joins her hands in devotion, as if to acknowledge her Son’s meaningful gestures

Books

Unfolding mysteries: the drama of drapery in Italian art

The striking yet subtle jacket image from Donatello’s ‘Madonna of the Clouds’ announces this book’s quality from the outset. Its…

Famous cricketers of the 1880s include James Lilywhite (far left) and W.G. Grace (centre). Credit: Getty Images

Books

Farewell to cricket as the archetypal English game

At the beginning of August this year, the England test team played what is supposed to have been the 1,000th…

The Statue of Liberty, photographed during a partial solar eclipse. ‘Far from being a cheerful present from one nation to another, Liberty is a subversive and occult statement’

Books

The Statue of Liberty is a deeply sinister icon

Immigrants to the United States in the late 19th century discovered in Upper New York Bay, after a long, uncomfortable…

The discovery of the murder of Lord William Russell. Credit: Bridgeman Images

Books

The Victorian melodrama that led to murder and mayhem

Early on the morning of 6 May 1840, a young housemaid in a respectable Mayfair street discovered that her master,…

‘Pygmalion and Galatea’ by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824–1904). The statue of Galatea poses issues about dolls sold for sex, according to Adrienne Mayor

Books

The ancient Greeks would have loved Alexa

Among the myths of Ancient Greece the Cyclops has become forever famous, the Talos not so much. While both were…

Credit Getty Images

Books

A darkly comic road trip: The Remainder, by Alia Trabucco Zerán, reviewed

You could call The Remainder a literary kaleidoscope: look at it one way and you see how the past lays…

Australian Books

But does it pass the breath, er, pub test?

Anne Summers in 2011 was named by Vogue magazine as ‘one of the world’s wisest women’. After reading her memoir…

Arts

What do we learn from these poppies ‘weeping’ from a tower in Derby?

Arts feature

For the sake of art as much as society, it’s time to stop remembering the war

A cascade of poppies falls from ‘weeping windows’ across Britain. A 50-metre drawing of Wilfred Owen appears in the sand,…

Maisie Williams as Caroline in the breathtaking new play 'I and You' at Hampstead Theatre. Photo: Manuel Harlan

Theatre

One of the best plays I’ve ever seen: I and You at the Hampstead Theatre reviewed

Lauren Gunderson’s play I and You opens in the scruffy bedroom of 17-year-old Caroline. Lonely, beautiful and furious, she’s unable…

‘The Doom Fulfilled’, by Edward Burne-Jones, 1888

Exhibitions

Like today’s conceptual artists, Burne-Jones was more interested in ideas than paint

‘I want big things to do and vast spaces,’ Edward Burne-Jones wrote to his wife Georgiana in the 1870s. ‘And…

Making a Murderer 2's mesmerising dea ex machina Kathleen Zellner

Television

Thanks to Making a Murderer, Wisconsin’s bovine incompetence has been exposed

I wonder if Wisconsin has any idea what an international embarrassment it has become? By rights it ought to be…

Michelle Obama during the 2008 Democrat primaries. Photo: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Radio

When the first world war ended, many soldiers were left with ‘a terrible empty feeling’

‘It was so unreal,’ said one of the first world war veterans about the long-awaited Armistice. It was the most…

Money to Byrne: David Byrne deserves every penny he makes from this tour

Pop

Why David Byrne deserves every penny he makes from his tour

Let’s get the ‘was-it-good?’ stuff out of the way first. Yes, it was good. It was better than good. It…

Carey Mulligan in 'Wildlife'. Photo: Courtesy of Sundance Institute

Cinema

Exquisite and riveting: Wildlife reviewed

Wildlife is an adaptation of the 1990 novel by Richard Ford about a family coming apart at the seams, and…

The Gyorgy and Marta show: the nonagenarian couple have been an unlikely hit on YouTube

Arts feature

One of the last living avant-gardists speaks – Gyorgy Kurtag on his new Beckett opera

Arriving in Budapest, I receive a summons I cannot refuse. Gyorgy Kurtag wants to see me. Famously elusive, the last…

Mike Leigh (Canadian Press/Rex/Shutterstock)

The Heckler

There’s nothing radical about Mike Leigh’s films

So there I was in Soho Square on a cold and rainy morning, nibbling my complimentary almond croissant and eagerly…

Culture Buff

Nadine Garner

As the most subscribed theatre company in the country, the Melbourne Theatre Company can be deservedly proud of its long…

Life

High life

Trump has driven the American media mad

New York An old-fashioned party is a gathering of friends invited by the host or hostess, who foots the bill.…

Low life

The perils of smoking three-year-old Glaswegian skunk

Three years ago we were given a bag of skunk, Catriona and I, provenance Glasgow. It was one gigantic dried…

Real life

The NHS is teaching me how to stand properly

If you are wondering, any more than usual, how your tax is being spent, you should know that I have…

The turf

Why racing will miss Luca Cumani

Fairy tales can happen. On Sunday the filly God Given won Italy’s only Group One race of the season, the…

Bridge

Bridge

This autumn has been the busiest (bridge-wise) I can remember. It started with the Crockfords final at the beginning of…

Chess

Nos morituri

Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana, those two gladiators of the mind, will duel in London during the remainder of this…

Chess puzzle

no. 531

White to play. This is from Carlsen-Caruana, Bilbao 2012. Black has blundered right out of the opening. How did Carlsen…

Competition

Neo-gothic

In Competition No. 3073 you were invited to submit a short story in the Gothic style with a topical twist.…

Crossword

2384: Bang!

Unclued lights, singly or correctly paired, are of a kind, as given in Chambers. Ignore one apostrophe.   Across 5   …

Crossword solution

to 2381: Step changes

The word ladder connecting UNITED and STATES goes: UNITES (1D), URITES (18), WRITES (7D), WHITES (34), WHILES (30A), WHALES (7A),…

No sacred cows

Roger Scruton becomes the latest victim of the Twitchfork mob

‘Once identified as right-wing you are beyond the pale of argument,’ wrote Sir Roger Scruton. ‘Your views are irrelevant, your…

The Wiki Man

Sending more people to uni isn’t the answer

Imagine a world where employers judged applicants solely on their dress. Anyone in frayed clothes or scuffed shoes would never…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: What can I do about loud train snorers?

Q. At every drinks party one will be in mid-conversation with another guest and someone will walk over and loiter…

Drink

How violence in France led to the creation of London’s Courtauld Gallery

Darkness, but not the blanket of the dark. This was a sinister darkness, beset by smoke and flames, by the…

Mind your language

At sixes and sevens about seven and six

Someone on the wireless was talking about marrying in the Liberty of Newgate before the Marriage Act of 1753, and…