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The Critic Magazine November 2024 Edição anterior

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18 Comentários   •  English   •   General Interest (News & Current Affairs)
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In the November issue of The Critic, Andrew Orlowski examines why the National Grid is likely to fail sooner than we think, plunging Britain into blackouts; Jonathan Ford delves into the costly saga of state and corporate failure at Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard; Richard Negus exposes the error in the government’s biodiversity statistics whilst Laurent Lemasson and Gavin Mortimer examine why French voters prefer the policies of the Left and Right, yet neither win power.

Also, the ethicist Nigel Biggar and philosopher Bernard Henri-Lévy are profiled, Pierre d’Alancaisez deplores how art critics have become promoters, Robert Thicknesse extols London’s lost pleasure gardens, Sarah Ditum lauds the music of Kirsty MacColl, Robert Hutton reviews the latest political memoirs, Henry Jeffreys savours the “Barolo of the South” and on its fiftieth anniversary, Boris Starling relives the jabs and hooks that won the Rumble in the Jungle.
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The Critic

November 2024 In the November issue of The Critic, Andrew Orlowski examines why the National Grid is likely to fail sooner than we think, plunging Britain into blackouts; Jonathan Ford delves into the costly saga of state and corporate failure at Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard; Richard Negus exposes the error in the government’s biodiversity statistics whilst Laurent Lemasson and Gavin Mortimer examine why French voters prefer the policies of the Left and Right, yet neither win power. Also, the ethicist Nigel Biggar and philosopher Bernard Henri-Lévy are profiled, Pierre d’Alancaisez deplores how art critics have become promoters, Robert Thicknesse extols London’s lost pleasure gardens, Sarah Ditum lauds the music of Kirsty MacColl, Robert Hutton reviews the latest political memoirs, Henry Jeffreys savours the “Barolo of the South” and on its fiftieth anniversary, Boris Starling relives the jabs and hooks that won the Rumble in the Jungle.


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The Critic issue November 2024

The Critic  |  November 2024  


In the November issue of The Critic, Andrew Orlowski examines why the National Grid is likely to fail sooner than we think, plunging Britain into blackouts; Jonathan Ford delves into the costly saga of state and corporate failure at Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard; Richard Negus exposes the error in the government’s biodiversity statistics whilst Laurent Lemasson and Gavin Mortimer examine why French voters prefer the policies of the Left and Right, yet neither win power.

Also, the ethicist Nigel Biggar and philosopher Bernard Henri-Lévy are profiled, Pierre d’Alancaisez deplores how art critics have become promoters, Robert Thicknesse extols London’s lost pleasure gardens, Sarah Ditum lauds the music of Kirsty MacColl, Robert Hutton reviews the latest political memoirs, Henry Jeffreys savours the “Barolo of the South” and on its fiftieth anniversary, Boris Starling relives the jabs and hooks that won the Rumble in the Jungle.
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The Critic is Britain’s new monthly magazine that focuses on politics, art, literature, opinions, challenging ideas, diversions and more. Co-edited by Michael Mosbacher and Christopher Montgomery, The Critic speaks against a dangerous consensus that finds critical voices triggering, troubling, insensitive and disrespectful. Each monthly issue is comprised of highly honest and informed writing, rigorous content and thoughtful reflections from an opinion society.


The Critic provides open-minded readers with an honest view of all sides of today’s political and cultural debates, as well as asking the hard-hitting questions that other publications won’t. Discover a variety of regular features that speak honestly and lucidly about today’s current affairs and explore the opinions which govern modern Britain and so much more in every monthly issue.


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Examine the stories, opinions, ideas and thoughts surrounding today’s current affairs with a digital subscription to The Critic magazine. In each monthly issue enjoy:

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