Jarvis Cocker’s made-for-radio voice graces a new BBC Radio 4 series Wireless Nights.
Simon Norfolk’s haunting landscape photographs record the physical remainders of past atrocities.
This play by Cameroonian playwright and activist Lydia Besong explores themes of power, political corruption and the absurdities of censorship.
This anti-war classic by French director Jean Renoir has been reissued in a restored print for its 75th anniversary.
The life and politics of author Mary Shelley are laid out in this great new play—now set for a national tour.
Mary Shelley was the daughter of philosopher and early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, who wrote the landmark text A Vindication of the Rights of Women. Wollstonecraft died in 1797 when Mary was just 11 days old.
This year marks the centenary of Alan Turing’s birth
In the not too distant future what remains of North America is now the country of Panem. It is split into 12 different districts, each poorer than the last, ruled over by the wealthy Capitol.
The Chartists of the 18th century were Britain’s first mass working class movement. They demanded basic democratic rights such as vote by secret ballot and the abolition of property qualifications for MPs.
Mikhail Bulgakov’s novel The Master and Margarita does not lend itself to adaption for stage. Set in Moscow during the darkest days of Stalinist rule, it tells of a visit to the city by Satan and his retinue.