The Tate’s Art and Alcohol exhibition shows how working class drinking has been stigmatised—to avoid any deeper questions
Antony Hamilton’s new book A Rebel’s Guide to Malcolm X holds vital lessons for all revolutionaries, Nadia Sayed and Naima Omar told Alistair Farrow
US radical director Michael Moore’s film Where to Invade Next? makes some serious points, but badly idealises European society, writes Simon Shaw
Director Louise Osmond‘s look at the life of radical film maker Ken Loach comes straight from the set of his latest feature I, Daniel Blake, about life on benefits.
Marx, Genius of the modern world BBC Four, Thursday 16 June, 9pm
Actor Janet Etuk and director Alexander Zeldin spoke to Alistair Farrow about Beyond Caring, a new play about life on zero hour contracts.
Disabled actors bring to life a timely new production of Russian novelist Nikolai Gogol’s play The Government Inspector
This exhibition is a rare opportunity to see children’s books from 1920s and 1930s Russia.
A film about a college baseball team would normally be painful watching, but Everybody Wants Some!! is a funny ode to growing up, writes Andriana Sotiris
Pioneering American photographer Paul Strand gets the recognition that he richly deserves in this new exhibition.
Fans of 90s psychedelic rock band The Stone Roses have waited over twenty years for new material.
Netflix’s new drama Rebellion, set during the 1916 Easter Rising, has been greeted with much hype. Some of it is justified.