Thursday, August 30, 2012

Can political cartoons survive in a digital age? | Slavoj Žižek: the politics of Batman | Paul Ryan's fact-free speech

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30 Aug 2012

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Editor's Choice

Five must-read pieces from the magazine

  1. Can political cartoons survive in a digital age?
    Ink-stained assassins. By Helen Lewis

  2. Unlike Brown, Balls knows he can't fulfil his ambitions by plotting
    For now, Balls's ambitions are limited to becoming chancellor. By Rafael Behr

  3. Slavoj ��i��ek: The politics of Batman
    From the repression of unruly citizens to the celebration of the "good capitalist", The Dark Knight Rises reflects our age of anxiety. By Slavoj ��i��ek

  4. Graham Brady: the left should join me in supporting grammar schools
    As chair of the 1922 Committee, Graham Brady has the Prime Minister on speed dial. He is also a powerful campaigner for more selection in state education. By Caroline Crampton

  5. Yes We Can Go Forward and Believe in America! When did US campaign slogans become self-help mantras?
    Mitt Romney, Obama and their "inspirational" chants. By Martha Gill

Five must-read blogs

  1. Paul Ryan's convention speech heralds a post-factual age
    Time and again, Ryan mislead, misspoke, and made Demonstrably Misleading Assertions.
    By Alex Hern

  2. Why has London Met been banned from taking foreign students?
    A disproportionate and dangerous decision. By George Eaton

  3. Nightjack: an arrest is made
    Officers from Operation Tuleta arrest Patrick Foster. By David Allen Green

  4. The Sun's interview with violinist Nicola Benedetti was a masterclass in sexism
    Why have words at all when you could use the space for derogatory comments and suggestive pictures? By Alan Williamson

  5. Labour must be bolder as the storm brews
    Despite Miliband's fine words, the party still clings to a busted economic model. By Neal Lawson

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