February 2023, Issue 515 Jonathan Sumption on the British Empire * Jeffrey Wasserstrom on China's Cultural Revolution * Michael Burleigh on iPhones and Privacy * Lucy Lethbridge on Katherine Mansfield * Alberto Manguel on Italo Calvino * Caroline Moorehead on women writers during the Spanish Civil War * Mark Cornwall on Józef Piłsudski * Colin Thubron on following Chekhov down the Amur * Adrian Nathan West on gun violence in the USA * Tiffany Jenkins on the demise of museums * Sean O'Brien on Seamus Heaney's translations * Ian Critchley on Salman Rushdie * Keith Miller on Bret Easton Ellis * Suzi Feay on Don Paterson * and much, much more…
The Current Issue
Michael Burleigh
Spies in our Pockets
One of the least noticed gambits of Liz Truss’s spells as international trade secretary and then foreign secretary in 2019–22 was her quest for a free-trade agreement with Israel. It was to be as asymmetrical as most of the trade deals agreed since Brexit. Truss was prepared to move the UK embassy to Jerusalem – putting the UK in the select company of Guatemala, Honduras and Trump’s USA – and to ‘revisit’ the two-state solution. Rishi Sunak has since ditched these reckless proposals. The main prizes for the UK were to be joint ventures in defence and cyber warfare. Although a very small nation, Israel is among the leading powers in cyber technology, along with China, Russia, the USA and the UK. Israel’s main tech hub in Herzliya receives one fifth of global private investment in cybersecurity, from such firms as Cisco, IBM and Qualcomm, among others... read more
More Articles from this Issue
Jonathan Sumption
Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning
By Nigel Biggar
Nigel Biggar retired a few months ago from the Regius Professorship of Moral and Pastoral Theology at Oxford. He is a notable figure in the world of moral philosophy, not only because of his distinguished academic career as an ethicist but also because of his persistent refusal to observe the conventional pieties which characterise so much that is written in his field. There are few notions... read more
Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Red Memory: Living, Remembering and Forgetting China’s Cultural Revolution
By Tania Branigan
Tania Branigan reported from Beijing for The Guardian from 2008 until 2015, so Red Memory is part of a long and varied lineage of books about China by foreign correspondents. Most such volumes are of merely transitory interest. A small percentage have enduring value, such as the New Yorker writer Emily Hahn’s... read more
Caroline Moorehead
Tomorrow Perhaps the Future: Following Writers and Rebels in the Spanish Civil War
By Sarah Watling
‘Me, I am going to Spain with the boys,’ Martha Gellhorn famously told a friend in 1937 as she boarded a ship sailing from New York to France. ‘I don’t know who the boys are, but I am going with them.’ She knew perfectly well with whom she was going: Ernest Hemingway, who was on the point of abandoning his second wife for her. They... read more
Colin Thubron
The Boating Party
It was strange to meet him halfway across Siberia, at a lonely town on the Amur river. He had already travelled overland some 2,600 miles from Moscow, whereas I had followed the nascent Amur on a wandering route out of Mongolia. He appeared a little studious, even when he was young, pale and lightly bearded, with an expression of faintly unreadable concern. How he was dressed... read more
Robert Chandler
Disbelief: 100 Russian Anti-War Poems
By Julia Nemirovskaya (ed)
The day after Putin invaded Ukraine, a Russian friend wrote to me that she was feeling something she had never felt, or expected to feel, in her life. She was, she said, feeling the fear, horror, guilt and shame that a decent German would have felt in September 1939. There is nothing new about the brutality of war. Nevertheless, there are respects in which... read more
Salley Vickers
Metamorphosis: A Life in Pieces
By Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
There is a particular problem that books detailing an experience of a debilitating malady pose for the reviewer. For an author who has already undergone some gruelling trial, the slings and arrows from a (generally hale) critic might so easily become the last straw in a catalogue of miseries that the sensitive reviewer will be inclined to hold any... read more
Most Read
moreJonathan Sumption
Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning
By Nigel Biggar
Caroline Moorehead
Tomorrow Perhaps the Future: Following Writers and Rebels in the Spanish Civil War
By Sarah Watling
Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Red Memory: Living, Remembering and Forgetting China’s Cultural Revolution
By Tania Branigan
Michael Burleigh
Pegasus: How a Spy in Your Pocket Threatens the End of Privacy, Dignity, and Democracy
By Laurent Richard & Sandrine Rigaud
A J Lees
The Guru, the Bagman and the Sceptic: A Story of Science, Sex and Psychoanalysis
By Seamus O’Mahony
From the Archives
moreFrom the June 2002 issue
A C Grayling
Our Posthuman Future
By Francis Fukuyama
Redesigning Humans
By Gregory Stock
From the July 1999 issue
Jan Morris
View from the Summit
By Sir Edmund Hillary
From the August 1984 issue
Peter Ronnov-Jessen
Interview with J G Ballard
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