LRB Cover
Volume 39 Number 3
2 February 2017

LRB blog 26 January 2017

Oliver Miles
Britain Declines

26 January 2017

Thomas Jones
How does it make you feel?

25 January 2017

Helen McCarthy
Nineteen Thirty-One

MOST READ

16 February 2017

Susan Pedersen
Super-shallow-fragile-ego-Trump-UR-atrocious

16 February 2017

Stephen Sedley
The Judges’ Verdicts

17 April 2014

Seymour M. Hersh
Erdoğan and the Syrian rebels

In the next issue, which will be dated 16 February, David Bromwich on the new American order.

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NEW ONLINE

Stephen Sedley

The Judges’ Verdicts

Since 1689 the Crown has been stripped of the power of ‘dispensing with laws or the execution of laws’. Whether diplomatic withdrawal from the EU treaties is regarded as turning off the tap or dismantling the plumbing, its purpose and effect would be to dispense with extant legislation which makes EU law part of the UK’s legal system. That is something which on principle only Parliament has authority to do. More

Susan Pedersen

Super-shallow-fragile-ego-Trump-UR-atrocious

It’s hard to know just what will happen – though ‘Today we march, Tomorrow we run for office,’ was one good sign. Or as my group chanted, making its way to the White House: ‘We’re here. We won’t go away. Welcome to your very first day.’ More

FROM THE LATEST ISSUE

Hilary Mantel

The Secrets of Margaret Pole

We cannot approach her story from the inside. We know her, as we know so many of her contemporaries, through her inventories, through legal documents and official letters. Did she plot against the crown? Did she, as the regime alleged, burn the evidence that incriminated her? Or was there, as she claimed, nothing worth burning? More

Norman Dombey

North Korea’s Bomb

The sequence – tests followed by sanctions followed by more tests then yet more sanctions – has been going on for decades. Yet there is no complacency about the importance of North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme. Barack Obama is said to have told Donald Trump at their post-election meeting that North Korea is the biggest foreign threat the US faces. More


Patrick Cockburn

Misreporting in Syria and Iraq

It remains a gross exaggeration to compare the events in East Aleppo – as journalists and politicians on both sides of the Atlantic did in December – with the mass slaughter of 800,000 people in Rwanda in 1994 or more than 7000 in Srebrenica in 1995. All wars always produce phony atrocity stories – along with real atrocities. But in the Syrian case fabricated news and one-sided reporting have taken over the news agenda to a degree probably not seen since the First World War. More

John Lahr

Bruce Springsteen’s Memoir

After Clarence Clemons died in 2011, Springsteen auditioned a young sax player who arrived late and unprepared. ‘Where … do … you… think … you … are?’ Springsteen reports himself saying. ‘If you don’t know, let me tell you. You are in a CITADEL OF ROCK’N’ROLL. You don’t DARE come in here and play this music for Bruce Springsteen without having your SHIT DOWN COLD! You embarrass yourself and waste my precious time.’ The scene is not pretty; but the memoir’s value is that it risks embarrassment. More

Short Cuts
John Lanchester

At Tate Britain
T.J. Clark

Activestills
Yonatan Mendel


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