Capitalism permeates every aspect of our lives—every relation, every space and every surface. The most visible manifestation of this is advertising.
So long as there are foreign forces in Afghanistan, there will be resistance and, sooner or later, the occupiers will be defeated. Everyone knows this is what is going to happen.
Red Psalm centres on the peasant uprisings of Hungary in the late 19th century.
The Nuffield Theatre Company presents this new play set after this year’s rubbish collection strike in Southampton.
This year’s Afrika Eye Festival explores the changes taking place in Africa and beyond.
I thought I knew what was coming with this film—social realism, despair, small people crushed by big forces. Something in the vein of Ken Loach or Shane Meadows. But Tyrannosaur is actually something quite different.
The Victoria & Albert Museum’s postmodernism exhibition concentrates on the 1980s, when postmodernism was new and fashionable.
The Mitchell Library in Glasgow is putting on a special one-day event to mark the 75th anniversary of the Spanish Civil War.
As if unemployment wasn’t humiliating and soul-destroying enough, those bright sparks at BBC3 have decided to turn it into a reality gameshow.
Author and academic Helma Lutz speaks at Bookmarks bookshop about her new book on domestic work.
Rarely has television lent itself so powerfully to the anti-racist cause than in George Alagiah’s new documentary series Mixed Britannia, part of the BBC’s new Mixed Race season.
The shifting relationship between China and Africa has completely passed most people by.