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The Spectator

6 May 2023 Aus

A King in a hurry

What will Charles III’s reign look like?

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Australia

Leading article Australia

A King’s welcome

This magazine supports our constitutional monarchy and thus naturally delights in the spectacle of the coronation. Our constitutional monarchy, the…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

Here at the Melbourne Comedy Festival, it’s all go, go, go! We had scarcely finished this year’s festival when we…

Australian Features

Features Australia

But we have forgotten

Our promise to the Anzacs is being trashed

Features Australia

Don’t mention the… detainees

Labor premiers refuse to raise serious human rights concerns with Beijing

Features Australia, New Zealand

What is a woman? Don’t ask!

New Zealand’s PM apparently doesn’t know

Features Australia

Burying the bodies

Why all the unexpected deaths?

Features

Features

A King in a hurry

What will Charles III’s reign look like?

Features

Noble rot

I demand reparations for my ancestors’ fall from grace

Features

‘We may be history’

Geoffrey Hinton, the ‘godfather of AI’, on the dangers that lie ahead

Features

Power and glory

The religious roots of the coronation

Features

‘There were no parties after the war… this was all new’

Memories of Elizabeth II’s coronation — from those who took part

Features

Hedge betting

The battle to restore Britain’s hedgerows

Columnists

Columns

A tale of two appointments

When Boris Johnson appointed Simon Case to the Cabinet Office, he believed that the youngest cabinet secretary in a century…

Columns

What King Charles gets wrong

Marooned in London for a day between meetings, I walked for miles in an attempt to find something good to…

Columns

The cost of mass migration

Way back in the long distant 1990s, net migration into this country used to be in the tens of thousands…

Columns

Looking without seeing

Guadix is a windy, dusty town on the slopes of the dry side of the massive ridge that is the…

Columns

I’m a sucker for Tucker

I was asked on Tucker Carlson Tonight only once, while in New York about two years ago, and I turned…

Books

More from Books

Not so dumb

Lessons in ancient Greek for a young Korean poet who has lost her power of speech develop into a touching relationship with her half-blind teacher

More from Books

A world made of wood

The pressing need for timber in the 1830s led to tree-felling on vast scale – and the displacement of countless Native Americans as a result

More from Books

Crying in the wilderness

In two essays, from 1967 and 1983, he expresses the sense of abandonment felt in Central Europe – and his own dismay at the superficiality of western culture

More from Books

Adolescent angst

A violent adolescent breaks out of his ‘Last Chance’ reform home at dead of night – but can he ever escape his inner turmoil?

More from Books

Sand in the sandwiches, wasps in the tea

Their decline began with the arrival of package holidays in the 1960s – and new schemes for their revival seem already to have backfired

Lead book review

Is this the new Big Idea?

Daniel Chandler claims to be a bringer of values, to fill the vacuum at the heart of British politics. Noel Malcolm is unconvinced

Arts

Australian Arts

Dragons, broomsticks and whatnot

It was saddening to hear of the death of the poet John Tranter the other week. For those of us…

Television

Rabbit redux

With the current taste for remakes of erotic-thriller movies of the 1980s and ’90s, these are certainly good times for…

Pop

Don’t believe the naysayers

A user’s guide to how pop music works in the 21st century. Step one: you see a great new band.…

More from Arts

‘I have uncancelled myself’

David Starkey’s commentary on the Queen’s funeral on GB News was generally agreed to be the best of all the…

Classical

Imperial march

If being asked to write music for the coronation of a king is an honour, then doing it for an…

Film

Hook up

Peter Pan & Wendy is Disney’s latest live-action remake (the animated version was in 1953) and it’s quite the sombre…

Theatre

Upstart Crow without the jokes

The Swan Theatre has reopened after an overhaul and praise god: they’ve replaced the seats. The Swan is a likeable…

Theatre

Sins of the father

Dixon and Daughters is a family drama that opens on a note of sour mistrust. We’re in a working-class home…

Arts feature

Crowning glory

Dan Hitchens on the art that has shaped our image of the coronation

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

The Melbourne Comedy Festival’s continuing refusal to apologise for not closing this year’s festival with a tribute to its co-founder…

Aussie Life

Language

The word ‘gender’ has been part of the English language since at least 1390. It appears to have started at…

Drink

Bitter truths

England. Despite being a Scotsman, partly brought up in Ulster, I have taken so much Englishness for granted over so…

The Wiki Man

The case against koalas

There was a reason 18th-century rulers were eager for their subjects to grow and eat potatoes: the miraculous tuber offered…

No sacred cows

Life is a rollercoaster

I was in Canada last week, travelling across British Columbia on a luxury train called the Rocky Mountaineer. It was…

The turf

The turf

John Trotwood Moore, one-time State Librarian of Tennessee, was a racist and defender of the Ku Klux Klan. But in…

Low life

Low life

Marketa stands on one side of me, Catriona on the other. Marketa is Czech and my carer. Catriona is my…