Editor's Choice IN THIS WEEK'S NEW STATESMAN... In this week's New Statesman we ask what the tumultuous events in the Middle East mean for the future of the region. In our cover story, Olivier Roy, one of the world's leading experts on political Islam, says that one thing is certain: the age of Arab-Muslim exceptionalism is over. Elsewhere, Jon Bernstein explains why Israel is so troubled by events in Egypt. Also this week, Mehdi Hasan condemns Labour's feeble response to David Cameron's attack on multiculturalism, NS editor Jason Cowley laments the intellectual paucity of the coalition, John Pilger says the Egyptian revolt is coming home and Alice Miles looks at how rising fuel prices are preventing people from working. All this, plus Stanley Johnson on why the government's forest sell-off will cost us dear, interviews with Labour cabinet minister Sadiq Khan and TV presenter Lauren Laverne and Ryan Gilbey on the Coen brothers' new film, True Grit. The issue is on sale now, or you can subscribe through the website. Get a FREE copy of Eric Hobsbawm's How to change the world: Tales of Marx and Marxism when you start your annual subscription today for just £82. The five most read blogs - Why David Cameron is wrong about radicalisation and multiculturalism | Mehdi Hasan
- Vajazzled and bemused | Laurie Penny
- Full transcript | David Cameron | Speech on radicalisation and Islamic extremism | Munich | 5 February 2011 | The Staggers
- PMQs review: on-form Miliband gets the better of Cameron | George Eaton
- Osborne lands some low blows against Balls | George Eaton
BFI: Tales from the Shipyard This February the BFI presents Tales from the Shipyard. Celebrate the nation's shipbuilding heritage with remarkable films in cinemas nationwide, a pioneering DVD boxset and new collections at Mediatheques and on Screenonline.
In Cinemas Nationwide: BFI Southbank, London | Queen's Film Theatre, Belfast | Tyneside Cinema, Newcastle | Glasgow Film Theatre | Leader: The "big society" is unworkable in the age of cuts | |
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