The How We Are: Photographing Britain exhibition currently showing at London’s Tate Britain gallery certainly can’t be faulted on grounds of scale or ambition.
This excellent production is written and performed by singer Anna Zapparoli and songwriter and pianist Mario Borciani.
Fighters For Lifeby Michael Rosen£7.99 The writer, poet, broadcaster and regular Socialist Worker columnist Michael Rosen has been gaining wide recognition of late with his recent appointment as children’s laureate.
Alevanta!Benjamin EscorizaCD out now Alevanta! is the first solo album by Benjamin Escoriza, the former lead singer of the seminal Spanish band Radio Tarifa.
The Imperial War Museum in London includes a fascinating map of the world that lights up to show, year by year, which countries have been ravaged by conflict since the Second World War.
The tragic life of the French singer Édith Piaf touches at the heart of the struggles over national identity in France.
If you’re heading to the Glastonbury Festival later this month, don’t miss what promises to be a superb night hosted by Love Music Hate Racism at the Left Field.
Last week saw the release of the long-awaited album from Wiley, leading protagonist of east London’s "grime" sound.
The idea that the media, and television in particular, is just one giant propaganda machine is widespread.
Although she is only 29 years old, the Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie has won wide acclaim. Her first novel Purple Hibiscus was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction and longlisted for the Booker.
Taking liberties is a new political documentary film that traces how civil rights in Britain have been systematically dismantled under ten years of New Labour.
Histrionics is a huge triangular installation by artist Roderick Buchanan at the Gallery of Modern Art in Glasgow. It deals with the issue of sectarianism.