The Current Issue

Issue 551 Ritchie Robertson on Weimar * Charles Darwent on Louise Bourgeois * John Guy on the Tudors * Kirsten Tambling on dogs in art * Piers Brendon on Churchill and the crown * Saul David on AI warfare * Simon Nixon on private equity predators * Nigel Andrew on outsider animals * Zoe Guttenplan on Beatrice Warde * Maren Meinhardt on women and music * Lucy Lethbridge on swimming * Diane Purkiss on being published * Anthony Pagden on the West * Michael Reid on Lula * Anthony Teasdale on Tory leaders * Anna Reid on Vera Gedroits * Wendy Holden on Elizabeth II * Harriet Rix on trees * Emma Smith on Shakespeare’s identity * Jane Yager on Herta Müller * Sheena Joughin on Siri Hustvedt *  Adam Kucharski on evidence * Keith Miller on Douglas Stuart * Natalie Perman on Jem Calder *  and much, much more…

Ritchie Robertson

Weimar on Edge

The small town of Weimar is overladen with historical associations. Goethe spent more than fifty years there as an employee and friend of Duke (later Grand Duke) Karl August. After the last grand duke abdicated in November 1918, the National Assembly met in Weimar to draw up a new republican constitution for Germany. Other symbolically charged venues considered were Nuremberg (home of Dürer) and Bayreuth (because of Wagner), but it was Weimar that gave its name to the period of German history from ... read more

More Articles from this Issue

Kirsten Tambling

The Dog’s Gaze: A Visual History

By Thomas W Laqueur

Twenty-five thousand years ago, a boy and a dog walked into the Chauvet cave in what is now southwestern France. The boy carried a torch, and by this light he studied the horses drawn on the walls many years earlier by Palaeolithic fingers. The dog stayed close. In fact, as Thomas W Laqueur recounts, its pawprints appear on the limestone floor ‘only where there is art to be seen’. We are at this point in the ... read more

Piers Brendon

Churchill and the Crown

By Ted Powell

I once saw Mary Soames, Sir Winston Churchill’s youngest daughter, curtsy to the Duke of Gloucester. She performed a deep, sweeping genuflection worthy of a professional ballerina and, considering that she was about eighty at the time, I congratulated her on the feat. ‘Oh,’ she replied, ‘my family has always paid due homage to royalty.’ This was certainly true of her father, who revered the institution of monarchy as ‘the crowned ... read more

Maren Meinhardt

Vocal Break: On Women, Music and Power

By Lauren Elkin

‘Make your own kind of music,’ Cass Elliot exhorted us in her joyful ode to being true to yourself, and it could easily serve as the motto for Lauren Elkin’s new book, Vocal Break. Although we think of singing as the natural expression of our true personalities, it is in fact nothing of the sort. Especially, it turns out, if we happen to be women. The vocal break is what happens when the voice changes register, from ... read more

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