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The Spectator

26 March 2016 Aus

Resurrection shuffle

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Resurrection shuffle

The Easter message is about resurrection. In Australian politics, the week before Easter has seen more risings than Lazarus with…

Diary Australia

Stop the presses!

For seasoned consumers of Australian media, watching what are surely the last chapters of Fairfax as we know it be…

Australian Features

Features Australia

A fishy Price tag

Can an expensive firm of accountants really tell us the true value of our democratic rights?

Features Australia

Immoral relativity

Crusaders against paedophilia seem able to turn their outrage on and off

Features Australia

My ideas boom

Innovative ways to make our government lean and agile

Features Australia

Trump Derangement Syndrome

Why such antipathy to The Donald?

Features Australia

Not all multiculturalism is created equal

Why is Australia’s model so much more successful than Europe’s?

Features

Features

The Conservative crack-up

Months after a historic election victory, party unity is in pieces. What can David Cameron do about it?

Features

The Clintons made Trump

Why the only rational answer for US voters is ‘none of the above’

Features

Why we need migrants

It’s not about economics. It’s about our snobbish, slobbish culture

Features

The price of a cathedral

Entrance fees? Fashion shows? Corporate dinners? These days, nothing is ruled out

Features

Feedback frenzy

It used to be fun telling companies what you thought of them before they insisted on it all the time

Features

Feminists for Brexit

You only have to listen to the patronising, gaslighting ‘in’ campaign to know why

Features

Oh, what a lovely Waugh!

My father enjoyed playing up to his misanthropic reputation. But its consequences now are beyond a joke

A vast stage set: St Petersburg

Notes on...

St Petersburg

Book your holiday for May or June, when the light-hearted locals are emerging from winter hibernation

The Week

Leading article

The jihad continues

Tuesday’s explosions in Belgium soon after the arrest of Paris suspect Salah Abdeslam show the Islamists’ ability to act quickly

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Iain Duncan Smith resigned as Work and Pensions Secretary two days after the Budget, throwing the government into a…

Diary

Diary

Ben Schott has an app for that. Also in his diary: first-class stance, tiponomics, and the Independent’s photographic golden age

Barometer

Barometer

Also in our Barometer column: ageing populations; stay-at-home towns; growing mountains

Ancient and modern

Cicero on regulating MPs

How the ancients dealt with the age-old question of ‘Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?’

From The Archives

Flying start

From ‘Common-sense and the command of the air’, The Spectator, 25 March 1916: The Air Service will be the great fighting…

Letters

Australian letters

Lefties Sir: Why is it that conservative commentators never promote the fact that Hitler and the Nazis were National Socialists?…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

Spectator’s Notes

Also in The Spectator’s Notes: the last of Operation Midland, Labour anti-Semitism, Obama in Cuba, and hot-cross buns

Rod Liddle

Could a yoghurt defeat David Cameron?

Labour seems to be trying to find out

Mary Wakefield

The scan said my baby wouldn’t live. It was wrong

A callous sonographer who treated guidelines as facts left me and my husband in mistaken mourning

James Delingpole

What will I do with my second chance at life? Play more video games, for a start

After my pulmonary embolism I’m watching trash TV with my son, spending hours on the Xbox... and reading The Iliad

Any other business

My straw polls say the ‘leave’ campaign is failing to make a clear economic case

The ‘leave’ lobby has the best tunes but fails to make a clear economic case

Books

Preparing for modern warfare: Indian infantrymen c. 1940

Lead book review

‘Help the British anyhow’

Srinath Raghavan shows how fighting with the Allies in the second world war would profoundly affect India’s future, for better or worse

Books

Sick transit

Caroline Jones records in gut-wrenching detail the organised chaos of her 14-year battle with bulimia

HMS Agamemnon lays the first Atlantic telegraph cable between Trinity Bay and Valentia Island

Books

Going global

Ben Wilson’s Heyday describes many thrilling advances in world communication and travel — and fortunes made and lost in the gold rush

Books

Tainted love

Barney Hoskyns describes how Bob Dylan’s ‘greatest place’ in the early Sixties soon became one big chaotic nightmare

Books

A mix of myths

Deborah Levy’s novel, set in contemporary Spain, is rich in mythological allusions — especially to the Gorgon Medusa

Books

Disgusted of X-ville

Despite its drab prison setting and lonely, dysmorphic heroine, this creepily funny first novel shows immense promise, says Lewis Jones

Self-portrait at the spinet by Lavinia Fontana, 1578 and ‘Birthday’ by Dorothea Tanning, 1942

Books

Sexy self-advertising

Frances Borzello argues that the best way for female artists to advertise their skills was to paint self-portraits

Marina Litvinenko: a tireless campaigner for justice for her late husband

Books

Murder most foul

Alexander Litvinenko’s gruesome poisoning in 2006 continues to pose many disturbing questions — not least over Britain’s cynical attitude to justice

Books

Diced heart and a full-bodied red

Ghosts of the past haunt Commissario Soneri in this sinister story of bribery and murder in fog-bound Parma

Books

Worshipping the sun

We are only just beginning to understand our neighbourhood star, its mysterious corona and its effect on our weather, according to Lucie Green’s thrilling 15 Million Degrees

Books

Neighbours and strangers

Despite her alias, Margaret Forster’s heroine finds it difficult to rebuild her life after serving ten years in prison

Books

Sins of omission

Kadare writes hauntingly about loss and omission— the girl never met, the book never written, the love never found

St Paul (detail) by the Byzantine Master,St Sophia Cathedral, Kiev

Books

Following the followers

Tom Bissell goes in search of the tombs of the Apostles — but finds that their legends soon run into the sand

Australian Books

God’s children

Once upon a time, Christianity in Australia was seen as the One True Faith. These days, it is likely to…

Arts

Arts feature

Sins of the fathers

Damian Thompson admires a Chilean film about paedophile priests which, unlike Spotlight, dares to explore social and psychological complexities

‘Wall Street, New York’, 1915, by Paul Strand

Exhibitions

The counterfeiters

Martin Gayford does a roundup of photography shows including Performing for the Camera at Tate Modern, Paul Strand at the V&A and Avedon Warhol at Gagosian Gallery

Theatre

Nuclear waste

Plus: a play about the Easter Rising that reveals popular support for the Dublin rebellion was patchy at best

The public prosecutor, Geetanjali Kulkarni, in ‘Court’

Cinema

Slow burn

This courtroom drama is understated and patient, and the acting deliciously naturalistic - and it’s available to watch online so there’s no excuse

Opera

Carry on Don

But the production has energy. And full marks to the company’s Iphigenie en Tauride – for daring

Television

Good cop, bad cop

Plus: The A Word, BBC1’s impressive replacement for Happy Valley, is both tactful and not remotely soppy about the difficulties of autism

Radio

Born again

Plus: Radio 4 on the joy of rockpools - and how to get a foot on to the property ladder (if you’re a crab)

Culture Buff

Culture buff

‘The Queen is dead!’ are not words any of us is anxious to hear; they will be followed by the…

Life

High life

High life

Uncle Vlad did a Kutuzov in Syria

Low life

Low life

I shared a cab with a stripper from Cardiff during the Cheltenham Festival

Real life

Real life

Darcy has been lame all year, and it just keeps getting worse

Long life

Long life

Louise Minchin wants to sit on the right - is it her right?

Wild life

Wild life

The destruction of habitat is the greatest threat to wildlife

Bridge

Bridge

Bridge players are a superstitious bunch. And I don’t just mean the steps they take to prepare for matches —…

Chess

Tal story

With the proliferation of modern opening theory and advances in knowledge of the game, I wonder sometimes if the kind…

Chess puzzle

No. 401

White to play. This is from Karjakin-Nakamura, Fidé Candidates, Moscow 2016. Hikaru -Nakamura has just implemented an ingenious combination to…

Competition

Seuss talk

In Competition No. 2940 you were invited to supply Dr Seuss’s take on the US presidential race. Given his taste…

Crossword

2253: Your starter for ten

One ‘unclued’ light, as the title suggests, can be paired (on one occasion twice) with each of the other unclued…

Crossword solution

To 2250: Knavish

The unclued lights can be preceded by JACK.   First prize Margaret Lusk, Preston, Lancs Runners-up P.D.H. Riddell, London SE23;…

Status anxiety

Why I’d like to be a more dangerous dad

Maybe it’s because of my childhood. I came home aged ten and disturbed burglars but I lived to tell the tale

The Wiki Man

Directions your phone can’t give you

Human intuition is tuned to get questions vaguely right rather than precisely wrong. Ignoring it is a mistake

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: another suggestion for calling in a forgotten debt, and how to handle Brexit arguments

Drink

On the trail of a Holy Grail

A journey through grand cru vineyards and crypt-like cellars to discover the overlooked vintages of 2014

Mind your language

Butterbump

Newly named as a cross between goosebumps and butterflies, it doesn’t sound a very agreeable sensation