The trailer for BBC2’s new series entitled the "White Season" could easily be mistaken for a British National Party (BNP) recruitment campaign.
Politicised singer-songwriter Sam Duckworth – Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly. – returns with the follow-up to 2006’s Chronicles of a Bohemian Teenager Part One.
A Turkish revolutionary flees to Germany looking for her mother.
This classic 1970 film about the psychology of fascism is being re-released.
US imperialism is in trouble and, as Gil Scott Heron once said, "John Wayne is no longer available", so enter Sylvester Stallone with Rambo’s fourth slaughter-filled outing.
This new exhibition displays a collection of agitational posters spanning 40 years. The collection includes rare posters in support of African liberation struggles.
George Bernard Shaw was born in Dublin in 1856. He was one of the most prolific playwrights of his time. In 1891 Shaw introduced the work of the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen to the English-speaking world and in the process he helped create 20th century realism on the English stage.
Control is about the life of Ian Curtis, the lead singer of Joy Division, as the band shot to fame in the late 1970s. It chronicles his turbulent relationship with his wife Deborah.
This exhibition celebrates the life and work of photographer George Rodger on the centenary of his birth.
Following the success of the new film There Will Be Blood, Penguin have released the classic novel which inspired it.
Perhaps the most surprising thing about this book from psychologist and media personality Oliver James is the title.
Paul Robeson was a fighter against war and oppression, a supporter of the Communist Party and much more.