The Monthly | Australian politics, society & culture

The endless reign of Rupert Murdoch


The Latest

‘Queer Eye’ has its finger firmly on America’s jagged pulse

Culture

The uncommonly caring makeover show returns to Netflix for a second season

He’ll be back

Today

The zombie company tax debate

The mesmerising ‘Dark Emu’

Culture

Bangarra’s latest production explores Aboriginal Australians’ sophisticated farming practices

Manners and morals

Tired of Winning

The American conversation about civility and Trump’s reversal on migrant families

The gleeful misanthropy of ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’

Culture

Chaos saves the dinosaurs in this latest franchise instalment

Picking on Aunty

Politics

Why the latest push to privatise the ABC is not new or surprising


TIRED of WINNING

American Dispatches by Richard Cooke


American politics and society has rarely, if ever, been as tumultuous as it is today.


Read On

The Nation Reviewed

Voice, Treaty, Truth

An uncoordinated approach to treaty-making creates a quandary for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders

Minding your data in a post-GDPR world

Some good news about online privacy has just popped up

The Buddha of Bendigo

The world’s biggest gem-quality Buddha statue has made its home in central Victoria

Crafting a ceramic habitat for a handfish

Hobart artist Jane Bamford is helping a critically endangered fish to spawn


The Monthly Essays

Child protection doesn’t always protect children

When families in the Northern Territory need help, removing children isn’t necessarily the answer


VOX

The amazing true story of a sex ed outrage

Why did a children’s book published three years ago suddenly go viral?

Owl

The Courts

A sorry procession

A day in the life of the Geelong Magistrates’ Court

Courts

Arts & Letters

The end of American diplomacy: Ronan Farrow’s ‘War on Peace’

The Pulitzer Prize winner explains how the State Department’s problems started long before Trump

Two worlds at the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale

The consumption of space, land and habitat is Australia’s focus at the world’s preeminent architecture event

Dirty work: Clayton Jacobson’s ‘Brothers’ Nest’

The filmmakers behind ‘Kenny’ take a darker turn

Angélique Kidjo reinvents Talking Heads’ ‘Remain in Light’

This remake of the 1980 classic insists on the connections between musical traditions



Noted

‘Kudos’ by Rachel Cusk A masterful trilogy concludes By Stephanie Bishop

‘Colony’ at NGV Australia Twin exhibitions explore the very different experiences of settlement for European and Indigenous peoples By Miriam Cosic


In Light of Recent Events

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