LRB Cover
Volume 40 Number 12
21 June 2018

LRB blog 21 June 2018

Sam Thompson
Not a word from Geoffrey

20 June 2018

The Editors
Stanley Cavell

18 June 2018

William J.R. Curtis
In Memoriam GSA

MOST READ

20 April 2017

David Runciman
Tony and Jeremy

6 January 1994

Stanley Cavell
Nothing goes without saying

1 June 2000

Edward Said
An encounter with J-P Sartre

In the next issue, which will be dated 5 July, John Lanchester: ten years on from the Crash.

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David Runciman

The Last World Cup

The evidence for the premise that international sport spreads peace and goodwill has always been fairly thin: every major tournament is dressed up that way but the legacy is more often mothballed stadiums and simmering resentment, as was the case after South Africa 2010 and Brazil 2014. Rarely, though, has a regime so brazenly signalled its indifference to the niceties of international sport, which require at least the pretence that bad behaviour gets put on hold. As the saying goes, hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue, and this is the currency in which Fifa likes to trade. But Putin isn’t having any of it. He seems to have treated the award of the tournament as a licence to try his luck. More


Rosemary Hill

Unhappy Ever After

A marriage that makes a good end to a comedy will often make as good a beginning to a tragedy. If any couple bore out that maxim it was Annabella Milbanke and George Gordon Byron. The ‘happy’ chapter lasted barely 24 hours, the ‘ever after’ is with us still. More

Pankaj Mishra

The Wrong Human Rights

Samuel Moyn wants to reinstate socialism – which was, after all, the ‘central language of justice’ globally before it was supplanted by human rights – as an ethical ideal and political objective. This may seem like a quixotic project. More

At the Movies
Michael Wood

Short Cuts
Lana Spawls

On David King
Susannah Clapp


FROM THE LAST ISSUE

Andrew O’Hagan

The Tower

At daybreak on 14 June 2017, a large, malodorous cloud hung over West London. You could see it for miles, acrid and acrimonious, the whole country waking up with a sense of disorder. And people required an answer. So we wiped their eyes and blamed the council. More

LATEST AUDIO AND VIDEO

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AUDIO The Tower

Rosemary Hill

An audio version of Andrew O’Hagan’s piece on Grenfell Tower is available here. Listen  »

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