This 1990 adaption of Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel is finally being released on DVD.
This exhibition tells the stories of black mixed race families in Birmingham in the 1950s and 1960s.
I wasn’t surprised by Carol Thatcher making racist jibes. She is after all the daughter of Margaret Thatcher, who once declared that immigrants were "swamping" Britain.
Lemn Sissay grew up in rural Lancashire in the care of Wigan social services. He never met another black person until he was 18.
Gomorrah is a film that gives a fictional portrayal of the Camorra, the Mafia-like organisation based in Naples and nearby Caserta in southern Italy.
If you live in Rotherham or support Rotherham United Football Club, you may have already heard the first single from The Tivoli’s debut album, National Service.
Imagine going into work to find a government supporter urging you through a megaphone to "say no to imperialism" and defend "our beautiful revolution".
This film explores the importance of football, religion and family in Brazil.
Bruce Springsteen’s 16th studio album has the feel of a celebration to it, following the election of Barack Obama.
Anthony McIntyre has been one of the most determined of Sinn Fein’s critics. But unlike most critics of the Irish Republican party he is not coming from the right.
When Do We Start Fighting? is a new play that explores the radical movement of the 1960s and 1970s in the US.
David Oluwale was last seen alive on the night of 17 April 1969, as he was being beaten by police officers in Leeds. Two weeks later his body was pulled out of the River Aire.