The Spectator
24 October 2015 Aus
The end of feminism
Victory has left 21st-century feminists in a morass of social-media sniping
Australia
Back to the future
With luck and prudent decision-making, the Coalition government will ride comfortably high in the opinion polls up to and beyond…
Australian Columnists
Dogzheimers
How far should a man be prepared to go for a free meal? Two weeks ago I came 12,000 miles…
Business/Robbery etc
The moral high ground is, they believe, exclusively the preserve of environmental activists in their war against fossil fuels. This…
Australian Diary
My Sunday starts watching the Wallabies take on Wales. My boys and I are transfixed by the gutsy display of…
Australian Features
Cost benefit analysis of a coup
Australia needs to take a careful look at its new PM-slaying political culture
Tolerating Islam
Muslim leaders must not hide beneath the deceptive robes of ‘hard’ multiculturalism
Savagely original Shakespeare
Enraged by African-American deaths, Peter Sellars channels his art into dance and re-interpreting the classics
Ayatollahwatch
The Dalai Lama, the Pope and the Ayatollah Khameini walk into a press conference … The Dalai Lama re-affirms his…
Features
The end of feminism
It should be celebrating its triumphs. Instead it has descended into pointless attention-seeking
Women’s issues are for everyone now, not just feminists
A true campaign for equal rights must cross boundaries
Red-brick revolutionaries
How Jeremy Corbyn is building a party of red-brick revolutionaries
How far can Bernie Sanders go?
It seems extraordinary, but the socialist senator of Vermont could be on track to win the Democratic nomination
Fear, loneliness and nostalgia: a return to Johannesburg
Justin Cartwright’s South African notebook
The Hinkley Point disaster
Britain’s new nuclear power plant, if it happens, is guaranteed to produce some of the most expesnive energy in the world
Iran’s hidden war with the West – and what we can do to fight back
The nuclear deal makes it more vital than ever that Britain helps hold Iran to its obligations
Anglesey: la dolce vita in north Wales
It’s an outdoors place, with puffins, basalt stacks and beaches of what might be mistaken for Caribbean sand
The Week
The human factor
Just over 30 years ago, Margaret Thatcher’s government decided to look at local government finance. A young aide, John Redwood,…
Portrait of the week
Home Xi Jinping, the ruler of China, came, with his wife Peng Liyuan, a folk singer, for a state visit…
Boris Johnson’s diary: Amid the China hype, remember Japan
This place was the future once, too. In many ways it still is
The clock towers bigger than Big Ben
Plus: the decline of British steel; and a comparison of prime-ministerial jets
Pericles vs Corbyn
Democracy doesn’t have to mean lack of leadership. But sometimes it does…
Revenge and Edith Cavell
From ‘Reprisals’, The Spectator, 23 October 1915: The Germans lately executed Miss Cavell, a good and brave English hospital nurse, on a…
Australian letters
Harsh words Sir: Noreen J. Pryor’s harsh words and insinuations about Rowan Dean in particular and the Spectator in general…
Columnists
Will Theresa lead the Out tribe?
If she backed the Outers it would give her what she has always lacked — a political tribe
Charles Moore’s Notes: If we want to save the elephant, we must legalise the ivory trade
Plus: Pooteresque Corbyn; Canada and the niqab; Mrs Thatcher, volume two; Michael Heath’s 80 birthday
Simon Schama’s migration muddle
But he has helped me complete my collection of angry TV historians
The car insurance industry is a disgusting racket
It’s designed so that as many industries as possible can get their snouts in the trough
Heathrow’s third runway could still be halted – here’s how
Plus: Why it’s right to welcome Chinese money; and a spot of le French-bashing
Books
The swastika was always in plain sight
Reviewing two new books on the Third Reich, Dominic Green argues that, by transferring ‘collective will’ to Hitler, the German volk were entirely complicit in Nazi atrocities
Charlotte Brontë: Cinderella or ugly sister?
Claire Harman’s new biography casts Charlotte not as feminist heroine but as an unhappy, unfulfilled woman, disappointed in all the men closest to her
David Mitchell is in a genre of his own
Slade House, Mitchell’s latest fiction, is an amusing puzzle about the paranormal that defies classification — but I wish he’d return to Cloud Atlas territory
What does it really mean to have a tyrannical father?
Disappointingly, we are none the wiser for reading Jay Nordlinger’s ‘inquiry’ into the children of 20 dictators — except that Castro’s ten-year-old had plenty to say about the banning of Christmas in Cuba
Would even Blair have put Felix Dennis in the Lords?
Fergus Byrne’s biography — not only authorised but commissioned — still makes the manipulative media mogul utterly repellent
John Lennon’s desert island luxury
Merging fact with fiction, Kevin Barry’s Beatlebone centres on Lennon’s retreat from New York to his lonely Irish island for rest and primal screaming
From Spike Milligan — and Marge Simpson — with love, light, peace and great respect
More Letters of Note, compiled by Shaun Usher — and if you don’t find anything of interest in this enchanting new volume, you are not a proper human being
When English Catholics were considered as dangerous as jihadis
Gerard Kilroy’s life of Edmund Campion shows how the gifted, charismatic Jesuit never sought a martyr’s fate
Behind the scenes at the Brighton bombing
Seen from the viewpoint of an IRA terrorist and a hotel manager, Jonathan Lee’s novel High Dive imaginatively recreates the carnage at the 1984 Tory conference in Brighton
Arts
Colm Tóibín on priests, loss and the half-said thing
Jenny McCartney talks to the unstoppable literary force about the new film adaptation of his novel Brooklyn
I doubt Goethe intended Werther’s sorrows to be as unremitting as this
But English Touring Opera offers relief with their transgressive romp through Tales of Hoffmann
Shakespeare at his freest and most exuberant: The Wars of the Roses reviewed
Plus: two comedies at the Tricycle and Old Red Lion that deliver laughs aplenty
Repetitive but compelling: Giacometti at the National Portrait Gallery reviewed
Plus: Courtauld Gallery's excellent display of Peter Lanyon's gliding paintings show a master of the 'airscape'
Self-pitying, despairing, often delusional: the real Marlon Brando
Listen To Me Marlon has Brando burbling into your ear for 102 minutes. It’s burbling at its most compelling
What’s it like to talk at length to a serial killer?
Plus: the lonely life of the Pitcairn Islanders and a sizzling new Arthur Miller adaptation on Radio 4
The Last Kingdom is BBC2’s solemnly cheesy answer to Game of Thrones
Plus: the start of the second series of Channel 4’s Fargo suggests this might be one of the highlights of the TV year
Culture buff
Edward Albee posed the question in 1962: ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’ The answer, it seems, is no one. There’s…
Life
I’m not surprised that my friend Donald Trump is leading in the polls
He is what he is and shows his middle finger to the fourth estate,
Curry and Modafinil with Winston Churchill
I could have listened to Max Arthur on the great warrior all afternoon but the time had come to get pissed
Sabs don’t want to stop fox-hunting; they never did
That’s why they dress up in balaclavas and boiler suits and try to thwart a pretend hunt
To tip or not to tip
First there was an anti-tipping movement in Britain and now the first crack has appeared in the American tipping culture
What Ryszard Kapuscinski airbrushed out of his bestselling book
He didn’t include the puncture, his travelling companions or his fit about missing tea with Haille Selassie’s relatives
No. 384
Black to play. This position is from Inarkiev-Salem, World Blitz, Berlin 2015. How did Black conclude the attack? Answers to…
Rocker to writer
In Competition No. 2920 you were invited to submit an extract from a novel written by a rock star of…
2234: A greater measure
One unclued light is the name of a drink which can be measured into three ingredients. Each ingredient has three…
To 2231: On the side
Unclued lights made mottoes around the rim of one-pound coins: (33) NEMO ME (12) IMPUNE (40) LACESSIT, (18) DECUS ET…
The fine art of talking bunkum
Sir Nicholas Serota exaggerates how much the arts have been downgraded in schools and universities since 2010
Spontaneous recombustion: how vapers have re-invented pipe-smoking in electronic form
EU plans to ban all devices except ‘cig-alikes’ will destroy an innovative new industry
Dear Mary: How can I greet friends without clashing specs?
Plus: Directory inquiries for the elderly; how to correct a poor compliment
Thanks to the rugby the Scots have a real grievance at last
Could this be revenge for the role of Scottish regiments in the Boer War?
Whipsmart: a new cliché that’s beginning to smart
But is it the speed or the sting that counts?




























































