The overt anti-war message of PJ Harvey’s new album, Let England Shake, marks a departure for a singer better known for intimate and inward-looking songs of relationships and emotions.
This is the first of a four-part series, exploring the post-war British workplace covering seven decades of turbulent change.
This is a retrospective of US feminist artist Mary Kelly, who tries to make the personal political.
As soon as Sarah Burton arrives in the sleepy village of Kiplington, it’s clear that she is going to shake things up.
Revolutions do more than smash the old order, they transform culture and change the way we look at the world.
Shipbuilding is all but extinct in Britain. But it was the bedrock of imperial power and central to defining the working class.
Weaving together Woody Guthrie’s words and songs, Woody Sez paints an engaging portrait of this folk hero’s fascinating life.
From the trailers and posters, you’d be hard pressed to work out what kind of film Never Let Me Go is.
The Promise came about after writer and director Peter Kosminsky received a letter from a former British soldier, who had been stationed in Palestine in the late 1940s.
Iness Mezel is a Berber Algerian singer and songwriter. Her songs are inspired by relationships and the struggles in the world around her.
American novelist Chester Himes was one of the first black novelists to gain success for thrillers such as The Real Cool Killlers and Cotton Comes to Harlem.