Israel isn’t an ‘apartheid state’ – and I should know
Can our universities be saved?
Simon Schama is a bore
Energy prices are shattering Britain’s remaining potteries
History lesson / A British Puy du Fou will upset all the right people
Gameshow theory / How to catch a traitor
Dispatch / My week in war-weary Ukraine
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Has Donald Trump saved the world?
In defence of working from home
Australia Day has been hijacked by activists
Could Russia and America ever have got along?
Revealed: GPs are over-diagnosing mental health conditions
Rachel Reeves’ ironic artwork choice
Elon Musk addresses AfD rally
The Traitors finale was a cruel spectacle
Oxford has had enough of its Gaza protests
Spectator TV Presents
Could Pierre Poilievre crush Canada's establishment elite?
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
Bets for Cheltenham Trials
From Spectator LifeKeith Jarrett’s accidental masterpiece
From Spectator LifeHunter’s chicken: the ultimate cheer-me-up-quickly recipe
From the magazineThe Reagan effect on wine lists
From the magazineSimon Schama is a bore
From Spectator LifeWhen Herbert von Karajan was at his celestial height in the 1960s, juggling conducting duties at the Berlin Philharmonic, the Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival, his musicians liked to tell a joke. ‘Karajan gets in a taxi, and the driver asks, “Where to?” Karajan says, “It doesn’t matter, they want me everywhere.”’ Not
The real reason you hate vegans
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Industrial tragedy
The death of British manufacturing
Unmade in Britain: we’re becoming a zero-industrial society
The French sociologist Alain Touraine coined the term ‘post-industrial society’ in 1969. By the 1980s it had become shorthand for the kind of services-based, individualistic economies most major developed nations had created. Today, the UK is moving its economy beyond that. We are creating what might be called a ‘zero-industrial society’. Climate change targets, soaring
Unmade in Britain: we’re becoming a zero-industrial society
The French sociologist Alain Touraine coined the term ‘post-industrial society’ in 1969. By the 1980s it had become shorthand for the kind of services-based, individualistic economies most major developed nations had created. Today, the UK is moving its economy beyond that. We are creating what might be called a ‘zero-industrial society’. Climate change targets, soaring
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Like lying down in front of a bulldozer: the Jesus Lizard, at the Electric Ballroom, reviewed
From the magazineMany indie types from the 1980s and 1990s were secretly metal fans. But it’s not something they ever really wanted to admit to in public. They’d talk a good game about the Stooges and the Velvet Underground but back home – as was the case with Leeds’s goth overlord Andrew Eldritch, of the Sisters of
It’s no Citizen Kane: The Brutalist reviewed
From the magazinePious bilge: Kyoto, at @sohoplace, reviewed
From the magazineWas Brazil the real birthplace of modernism?
From the magazineVisual ingenuity and wit: Monument Valley 3 reviewed
From the magazineCertainly intriguing: Apple TV+’s Prime Target reviewed
From the magazineIt’s moving to think how happy Van Gogh was in Brixton
From the magazineCartoons
Cartoon
‘‘On the bright side, we can be victims again.’’
Cartoon
‘‘Death, War – meet Artificial Intelligence.’’
Cartoon