Thursday, March 28, 2013

If women have to get their tits out to make a point, so be it | Labour’s unity is skin-deep | Doris Lessing: A room of one’s own

New Statesman  

Weekly Online
Newsletter
28 Mar 2013

HOME EDITOR'S CHOICE ECONOMICS POLITICS WORLD AFFAIRS BLOGS JOBS SUBSCRIBE


If you were forwarded this by a colleague please click here to subscribe


Editor's Choice

Five must-read pieces from the magazine

  1. If women have to get their tits out to make a point, so be it
    The campaign group Femen, which has been protesting topless since 2010, is doing feminist activism in a way that's cynical, knowing, and effective. By Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

  2. After God: What can atheists learn from believers?
    Why do religious stories continue to mean so much to so many of us, even to the self-described "new, new atheists"? By New Statesman

  3. David Cameron makes a fetish of toughness, because he has no other virtues to sell to voters
    Even the sceptics accept that Miliband's stance requires integrity and strength of will.
    By Rafael Behr

  4. Leader: Liberalism now feels inadequate in this new age of insecurity
    The stakes could not be higher. By New Statesman

  5. Labour's unity is skin-deep
    Members of the shadow cabinet don't trust their leader to cover their backs, says Dan Hodges. By Dan Hodges

Five must-read blogs

  1. Without the UK Border Agency, what will happen to those seeking sanctuary on our shores?
    Restructuring the UKBA will not confront its fundamental problems.
    By Rebecca Omonira-Oyekanmi

  2. Doris Lessing: A room of one's own
    A writer moves house. By Doris Lessing

  3. Without a starring role, David Miliband had to leave the stage
    The soap opera saga needed bringing to an end and the thwarted brother's emigration does the job as well as reconciliation. By Rafael Behr

  4. Where do disabled people fit into George Osborne's "aspiration nation"?
    From 1 April, six different cuts to support will start affecting disabled people. The result will be disabled people losing their independence, struggling to heat their homes and forced to withdraw from communities. What part can they play under such conditions? By Richard Hawkes

  5. 7 pictures of lonely journalists hoping for a Cypriot bank run
    The bank run probably won't happen, but capital controls might stay for a while. By Martha Gill

Subscribe!

The issue is on sale now, or you can subscribe through the website.

Special Offer

Get 12 Issues for just £12, plus A free copy of A History of Capitalism According to the Jubilee Line by John O'Farrell

Subscribe today for the following benefits:

  • Save £125 on the annual cover price!
  • Never miss an issue
  • The magazine will be delivered to your door each week - sent by first class mail or airmail
  • Free access to the PDF edition (worth £50 a year)
  • Money back guarantee - we will send you a full refund on the unexpired part of your subscription should you decide you don't want to receive any more issues
  • Free access to the New Statesman archive
  • Subscription continues for £14.99 at quarterly intervals, unless cancelled, for one year. Then £9.99 a month thereafter.


New Statesman Jobs

Now recruiting
New Statesman Jobs is the job site for intelligent and forward thinking job seekers. Click below to search jobs from our featured employers.

Administrator
  • Central London
  • Salary 18000.00 GBP Annual

Our client is looking for an Office Administrator for their branch in Muswell Hill.

In addition to the usual administration duties you will be required to keep property details up to date, coordinate advertising and deal with clients both in person and by telephone. You will also be required to perform general administration duties such as filing and creating invoices.


Recruiter: Pear Recruitment
 
Search thousands of top-quality jobs, click here
Sign up to New Statesman Jobs


 





Kindly note that if you receive this e-mail your e-mail address is being held by us for the purpose of communicating with you on New Statesman related matters. If you do not wish us to e- mail you, please unsubscribe from this list. New Statesman Limited is a Data Controller for the purposes of the Data Protection Act 1998. © New Statesman Ltd. 2009. The above information may be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient of this email please destroy it. As Internet communications are not secure please note that the New Statesman does not accept legal responsibility for the content of this email message.

No comments:

Post a Comment