Persepolis is the cinematic adaptation of Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical graphic novel, which is based upon her life growing up in Iran.
This exhibition focuses on the early years of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). It combines photography, cartoons and posters with talks from those involved in CND at the beginning and film showings.
Acclaimed radical playwright Trevor Griffiths spoke to Socialist Worker about his work on the life of the revolutionary Thomas Paine.
Percy Bysshe Shelley’s plays have not enjoyed the same popularity as his political poems, yet they show his attempts to reach the wide theatre audience that existed during his lifetime of 1792-1822.
Since the war on Iraq began in 2003, nearly five million Iraqis have been displaced from their homes.
This film is set in 1988 in Melo, a small Uruguayan town, as the inhabitants are awaiting the visit of the Pope.
Gone Too Far! explores identity, belief and racism through the prism of two teenage black brothers in London.
The Scoop is an outdoor sunken ampitheatre by Cith Hall in central London, which has run free theatre performances throughout the summer for the past six years.
The death of Youssef Chahine on 27 July means that Egypt has lost the last great director from the 1950s generation.
A day long festival with four entertainment arenas showing live music as well as games, a craft fair and food stalls.
An exhibition of cutting-edge 3D street art and graff sculpture, featuring the world’s most groundbreaking and renowned graffiti artists.
Big names and small share the bill at this Love Music Hate Racism supported festival.