KeIr Hardie was one of the key architects of the Labour Party, as Bob Holman’s book makes clear.
Congratulations to James Nowlan who won tickets to see the new production of Mikhail Bulgakov’s play The White Guard, which is on at the National Theatre in London.
When Little Richard helped pioneer the rock and roll sound in late 1950s US, the country’s dance halls mirrored the racial segregation that gripped the Deep South.
An industrialist recruits investigative journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) to solve the mystery of his niece’s disappearance 40 years ago.
Photographer Maurice Broomfield is responsible for some of the most emotive scenes of people at work that you are likely to see.
Hollywood has a revisionist narrative for every war – like the myth that the US single-handedly won the Second World War.
Guerilla artist Banksy has a film out, Exit Through The Gift Shop. It looks at the links between grafitti, art and advertising.
This film is set in a rural German village on the eve of the First World War.
This is a striking new play about the growth of the fascist British National Party (BNP) in an east London borough – a very thinly disguised Barking.
A new exhibition in Manchester that focuses on the history of protest in Britain is a must-see.
The End of the PartyAndrew Rawnsley, Viking £25