This film deals brilliantly with institutionalised racism and the police—shown through the arrest of a young black man on the night Margaret Thatcher became prime minister.
Say the name Tracey Emin and many people will immediately think of her bold pieces "My Bed"—the most visited exhibition in the history of the Tate—and "Everyone I Ever Slept With".
Carol Ann Duffy, Britain’s first female Poet Laureate—and the first lesbian to hold the title—is hosting a series of evenings of poetry and music in Manchester.
It’s 1986, somewhere in Britain. Shaun is finishing his final exam at school—a History CSE, for nostalgics.
Three teenage boys arrive to serve sentences at a juvenile offenders’ facility in Montana as this new prison drama opens.
Maxim Gorky’s play about life in Russia in 1902 is perfectly suited to the tiny warren that is the Baron’s Court theatre.
Cory Doctorow, web-famous for his part in promoting free culture on the internet, weaves an inspiring tale of rebellion against globalisation in his latest novel.
In 1853, 20,000 workers were out on strike in Preston. The city was at the heart of a major battle for a 10 percent pay increase across the cotton industry.
This is the second film made from Stieg Larsson’s bestselling Millennium trilogy.
The Leopard is a classic film that tells the story of momentous historical events through the lives of individuals.
This poetry collection tackles the dominant rhetoric of sacrifice in an Ireland facing recession.
Camille Silvy was a pioneering but little-known photographer.