LRB Cover
Volume 33 Number 23
1 December 2011

LRB blog 5 December 2011

The Editors
Christopher Logue 1926-2011

5 December 2011

Joshua Kurlantzick
Mrs Clinton goes to Naypyidaw

4 December 2011

The Editors
Khoury on Syria

MOST READ

3 November 2011

Pankaj Mishra
Niall Ferguson’s Burden

3 December 1981

Ted Hughes
That Morning

10 August 2000

Christopher Logue
Preamble

In the next issue, which will be dated 15 December, Jenny Turner on feminism, Mattathias Schwartz on Steve Jobs and Christopher Tayler on Murakami’s IQ84.

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Keith Thomas

Universities under Attack

We are all deeply anxious about the future of British universities. Our list of concerns is a long one. It includes the discontinuance of free university education; the withdrawal of direct public funding for the teaching of the humanities and the social sciences; the subjection of universities to an intrusive regime of government regulation and inquisitorial audit; the crude attempt to measure and increase scholarly ‘output’… More

FROM THE LATEST ISSUE

James Meek

In Athens

Darkness has fallen, and with it, a dynasty. George Papandreou, the prime minister, is on the car radio, making his parting speech. Since 1944 he, his father Andreas and his grandfather Georgios have been prime minister six times between them. Papandreou 3.0’s premiership was blighted from the start. On 20 October 2009, only 16 days after his mild-soup PASOK socialists had come to power, his finance minister piped up at a meeting with European counterparts in Luxembourg. Reminding them of Greece’s already high budget deficit, he confessed that, actually, it looked like being about twice as high. Sorry! It’s been downhill ever since, as the assortment of Greek and foreign lenders who allowed the country effectively to run up a huge mortgage jacked up the interest rate on that mortgage to fantastic levels. More


Tim Parks

Beckett’s Letters

At the turning point of this second volume of Beckett’s letters, which is also the turning point of his professional life, the moment when, after so many years of ‘retyping … for rejection’, his best work is finally to be published with enthusiasm by editors determined to let the world know what they have discovered, the author’s partner, Suzanne Déchevaux-Dumesnil, writes to Jérôme Lindon at Editions de Minuit to advise that Beckett does not wish his novel to be entered for the Prix des Critiques. It is 19 April 1951, Beckett is 45, the novel in question is Molloy. Suzanne explains: ‘What he dreads above all, in the very unlikely event of his receiving a prize, is the publicity which would then be directed, not only at his name and his work, but at the man himself.’ More

Colin Kidd

The Obdurate Knoll

The cultural consequences of 22 November 1963 are far more interesting than the events of the day itself. Historians like me tend not to find much of interest in the killing of one person by another, especially when the killer seems to have been a dysfunctional misfit. Of course, the assassination had puzzling aspects: Lee Harvey Oswald’s lengthy stay in the Soviet Union during some of the hottest years of the Cold War; the unlikely trajectory of one of the three bullets fired from the Texas School Book Depository, the ‘magic bullet’ which passed through the president’s neck and then through the body of the Texas governor, John Connally; and Oswald’s own murder while in police custody at the hands of Jack Ruby, a Dallas nightclub owner. More

Short Cuts
Andrew O’Hagan

At the Ashmolean
Julian Bell

At the Movies
Michael Wood

FROM THE ARCHIVE