The Critic is Britain's new highbrow monthly current affairs magazine for politics, art and literature. Dedicated to rigorous content, first rate writing and unafraid to ask the questions others won't.
All sound and fury
The Critic
Women who play along …
The man who ended overreach • Lord Reed’s tenure as president of the Supreme Court has been admired by those of us who value the stability of the law
Woman About Town
PESTON’S INBOX
HOW PROGRESSIVISM HOBBLED THE POLICE • David Spencer says the Diversity, Equality and Inclusion agenda promised a fairer form of policing, but has delivered a weaker one that is less capable and has lost public trust
EVERYDAY LIES WITH THEODORE DALRYMPLE
The great American dream • Beware the lure of the vast US market. We should focus instead on opportunities closer to home
Asset-stripping on campus? • Selling universities to private companies risks destroying their charitable purpose
THE ABSOLUTE STATE OF THE NATION • Scotland has become a tinpot country in which incompetence — or worse — need be no hindrance to the careers of seemingly bulletproof leading establishment figures
Carry on matron • Sebastian Milbank argues that the crisis in nursing can be reversed by a return to Florence Nightingale’s vision of vocation and a rebuilt hierarchy on the wards
Vapid slogans for the hard of thinking
The Mexican baby business • Julie Bindel calls for the end of an exploitative trade
THE AMERICAN CHAOS MACHINE • Dominic Green argues that the United States’s current aggressive expansionism and domestic strife are not a Trump-era aberration, but an intrinsic part of its national character
TRUMP THE IMPRUDENT KING • The President has so far achieved the opposite of what he promised, multiplying problems at home and abroad rather than increasing peace and stability
An uneasy peace amid the ruins • Unlike most of the cities of Syria, the historic heart of the capital, Damascus, emerged largely unscathed from 14 years of brutal civil war. But amid ongoing sectarian strife, its 4 million citizens remain uncertain of what the future will bring
Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law • Punishing anyone before they have even been convicted of anything makes me uneasy
Gentrification? Better than deprivation • Once one of the dodgier areas of South London, the Elephant and Castle has been radically spruced up, but not everyone is happy about it
Miracle of the magical migrants • A man’s identity is fluid when he steps on British soil but calcified on African soil, the left believes
Allan Massie • The late Scottish critic, author and journalist whose historical and crime fiction deserves to be much more widely read, says Henry Jeffreys
Giles Treadwell Old-style literary agent
Gender self-ID was never the law • Heroine to some, heretic to others, barrister Akua Reindorf KC speaks about the controversial trans guidance the government is so loath to implement
The truth about Shakespeare
Adam Dant on …
STUDIO • Lost Railway Art
From Wigton to Wadham College
Too starstruck to see Marilyn’s faults
Unreadable red bile
Making the case for liberalism
Why nobody likes a smarty pants
The Arctic circle: a game of ice and fire
The online life that steals your soul
Is this the end of art?
The roots of hatred
Spirits, a seven-year-old and a death camp
Terry tackles literary lightweights • Is a distinguished professor right to hold intellectual biography in low esteem?
Romeo Coates “Between you and me …”
Mehta’s protest over the Gaza war
A show to make you afraid of the...