Culture

Books

Jordan Peterson dressed as a vicar

The cult of Jordan Peterson

What the Canadian intellectual gets right about young men

ITALY. Naples. 2024.

Tech and religion are very much alike

They both have gods, rich institutions and secretive cultures


Suffragists protesting President Woodrow Wilson's opposition to womens' suffrage, Chicago, Illinois, United States, October 1916

Woodrow Wilson’s reputation continues to decline

A dispassionate new biography chronicles the former president’s hostility to suffrage


The long shadow of the Paris terrorist attacks of 2015

November 13th shook the French capital—but has not changed it

“Energy transition” has been profoundly misunderstood

At COP29 there will be plenty of discussion about it. But the idea is more complex than many believe

Fiction captures the forces that led to Brexit

Alan Hollinghurst, a Booker-prizewinning novelist, returns with a new, evocative yarn

The six-day siege that put terror on television




Darwin and Dawkins: a tale of two biologists

One public intellectual has spent his career defending the ideas of the other


In a posthumous memoir, Alexei Navalny chronicles his martyrdom

“Patriot”, by the murdered Russian opposition leader, will be seen as a historic text


What the row over Ta-Nehisi Coates’s book reveals about free speech

The deep message of “The Message” is about narrow-mindedness, not Israel

Television and film

A gold trophy cup full of popcorns

The best films of 2024, as chosen by The Economist

They feature nuns and cardinals, robots and strippers

This illustration shows a vintage television set with a static screen. A royal crown sits on top of the TV

The Economist’s selection of the best TV of 2024

The small screen claims some riveting shows this year, both new and returning


Paul Mescal plays Lucius in "Gladiator II"

What does “Gladiator II” get wrong?

Its artistic errors are even worse than its historical ones


In “Anora”, strippers and Russian heavies are not what you expect

Many stories rely on character types. The best reimagine them

Exposing the horrors of Ireland’s Magdalene laundries

Books, films and TV shows reckon with church-run homes for “fallen women”

Montanans are ready for “Yellowstone” to end

The hit series brought Montana to the masses—and the masses to Montana





“The Perfect Couple” and the new map of Moneyland

Depictions of the super-rich on screen reflect the times


Why many French have come to like “Emily in Paris”

Even if they may not want to admit it

The arts

"Muriel Maxwell" by Horst P. Horst on display at the "Art Cologne" fair at Koelnmesse in Cologne, Germany, April 11th 2019

Fashion photography is in vogue

Museums and collectors now want what were once panned as commercial images for their walls

Paul Gauguin, Self-portrait with palette, c. 1893

Paul Gauguin is an artist ripe for cancellation

Yet, as with others, controversy and talent were part of the same palette


A person walks past the exterior view of The Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery, London.

John Sainsbury, a donor to the National Gallery, had the last laugh

A hidden letter offers an insight into disputes between artists and patrons


Can Saudi Arabia become a premier tourist hotspot?

It has sun, sea and (lots of) sand. But people are wary of visiting the kingdom


Meet the man causing cracks in the antiquities trade

Matthew Bogdanos employs unorthodox tactics to repatriate stolen art and antiquities


Food

Food lovers the world over are tickled by pickles

On social media, preserved cucumbers are freshly trendy

Vesper martini at Duke's Bar, London

How the martini became the world’s most iconic cocktail

It has a glamorous history and can be endlessly personalised


A vendor arranges mangoes at a fruit market in the southern Indian city of Chennai.

In praise of mangoes

South Asia’s mangoes deserve a wider audience


Tinned fish is swimming against the tide

Once a staple of wartime diets, it is now a social-media phenomenon



Music

Amber Gray at the press conference for Hadestown on Broadway Meets The Press, Walter Kerr Theatre, New York, March 18th 2019

The New York-London arbitrage for musicals

Can you guess which is more expensive: Broadway or the West End?

Self-portrait by Arnold Schoenberg

Arnold Schoenberg was one of classical music’s most important rebels

But, 150 years after his birth, he is underappreciated


Concert of Kronos Quartet on the occasion of its 50 years in Prague, Czech Republic.

How Kronos became the world’s most innovative string quartet

The group’s 50th anniversary brings new music and new members


Pop stars are all about albums

Contradictory though it may seem in the streaming era

The hit series “Bridgerton” has set off a string-quartet boom

It is a surprising example of how popular culture can shape consumer habits

Why Beethoven’s ninth appeals to democrats and despots alike

Since its first performance 200 years ago, few pieces of music have won such varied devotees



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