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Prospect Magazine
Jan/Feb 2019
IN DE WINKEL BEKIJKEN

Andere artikelen in dit nummer


Prospect
New year, old wisdom
In Chris Morris’s 1990s news satire, The Day Today
Letters
In June 2016 voters had two choices, but one of them
Park life
The 13 national parks in England and Wales could soon grow in number
Is it time to ban internet porn?
YES Because the practicalities of porn are so unpleasant
New thinking for 2019
David Neuberger Learn the rule of law
All modern civilised societies are built on two pillars:
Melvyn Bragg No more referendums
Beware of holding another Brexit referendum. The first
Cathy Newman Set the giants on the trolls
Not so long ago I posted an innocuous tweet about the
Justin Welby Recall how to forgive—and disagree
We need to learn to forgive. Especially we need to
Hannah Fry Beware the robot takeover
After two full decades of our data being harvested
Bernie Sanders Aim for full employment
During my campaign for president in 2016, I stated
Niall Ferguson Respect natural monopolies
Is big tech too big? In the past year, interest has
Lisa Appignanesi Build a new sexual morality
I have now lived through three generations of feminism.
Michael Lewis Break your promises, trash your currency
Trust is everything. Donald Trump is going to teach
Angela Saini Fight the DNA determinists
One idea to have pushed its way back on to the scientific
Features
England’s dreaming
Brexit and one nation’s bewildering battle to wake from the nightmare of history
The Nixon playbook
Forget Watergate. In the second half of Trump’s term, there are other lessons he could learn from the Nixon years. Like reaching out across the centre-ground to strike deals— and do something practical for forgotten America
All the dirt on Britain’s waste
We worry about plastic and anguish over what goes in which bin. But as China refuses to take our waste, recycling is in crisis. Can it be saved?
THE FINAL FRONTIER
Man’s first steps on the Moon seemed like the beginning
Drinking is (probably) bad for us. Should we stop?
There is no safe level of drinking, according to a major new study. But who’s to say the very small risks of moderate drinking aren’t worth it?
A life more ordinary
Philip Larkin’s correspondence with his mother put him in touch with the precious texture of the everyday, which he transformed into some of the most sublime poetry since Donne and Marvell
A new direction
Soap actor, serious playwright, and now artistic director. How Kwame Kwei-Armah broke through barriers to become theatre’s leading man. By Lyn Gardner
Kurt Gödel and the romance of logic
The great theory of this emaciated genius of philosophy defeated the finest minds of the 20th century—and rescued the idea that there are truths that humans can never prove
Ode to the nose
We are often embarrassed by the protruding olfactory equipment on our faces. But noses shape our loves, lives and memories like no other part of the body
Fiction special & Prospect’s books of the year
Prospect’s books of 2018
In 2018, much ink was spilled over Donald Trump’s car-crash
Turbulence
When Ursula discovers her daughter Miri is engaged to a Syrian man living in Budapest, she is torn between generosity and fear. Miri, returning to London to visit her sick father, would rather be with her fiancé than in a city she no longer recognises
Art & books
Alluring discontent
The late style of the graphic novelist Posy Simmonds is both enticingly accessible and disturbingly perceptive, says Jane Shilling
Marks out of ten?
Can we grade works of fiction? Novelist and short story prize judge Benjamin Markovits thinks we can—and tells us how
Trumped-up tales
A US novelist stands up for decency in the face of an indecent president— and asks tough questions about her country’s origins, finds Diane Roberts
All finished
The struggles of Karl Ove Knausgaard— and those of his readers—are finally over, says Anthony Cummins
Fiction in brief
Sarah Perry’s bestselling second novel The Essex Serpent
Recommends
After Pierre Bonnard’s death in 1947, one critic said
Prospect life
The good divorce
My parents had to get divorced. That was the conclusion
White out
Two years ago, I had an unnerving experience while
The sporting rhymes
Inspector Morse thought that the saddest lines in the
Metal morphoses
The Greeks are well known for inventing a bunch of
Don’t diet
Oh, the misery of January! It’s so cold and we feel
Policy report: The NHS in winter
More than money
Tom Clark Editor, Prospect
Accidents and emergencies
Jon Ashworth Shadow Health Secretary and Labour MP for Leicester South
A community problem
Nigel Crisp Former NHS Chief Executive and permanent secretary at the Department of Health
Economics and investment report
Global outlook: it’s not all gloom
Global economic momentum at the start of 2018 was good—at
Three trends and three opportunities for 2019
Andy Davis Associate Finance Editor, Prospect
Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of
End games
The generalist by Didymus
Each completed grid will contain solutions beginning
Enigmas & puzzles
The competition consists of five puzzles in logic and mathematics. A possible solution (a), (b), or (c) is given below each puzzle. Entries must give the correct sequence of five letters.
Brief Encounter
Simon Schama Historian
The sinking of the Flying Enterprise, January 1952.
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