Books & arts
Democracy on the ropes?
Klaus Neumann
15 December 2025
Liberal democracy is being assailed by far-right populists and autocrats. Who’s coming to its rescue?
Books & arts
A triumph of human resistance
Ian McShane
15 December 2025
Historian Shayne Breen goes deep into Tasmania’s past, and illuminates its present
Books & arts
The view from Grassy Hill
Glyn Davis
15 December 2025
In his new book, Henry Reynolds turns Australian history on its head
Books & arts
A particular idea of Australianness
Richard Johnstone
8 December 2025
PIX magazine introduced photojournalism to a fast-changing mid-century society
Books & arts
Can we not live with Patrick White any longer?
Nicholas Jose
5 December 2025
“In White, Beckett meets Groucho Marx — and both fuse in an Elizabethan tragedy,” says a passionate new defence of the Nobel Prize–winning writer
Books & arts
Dark passions and inflammatory speech
James Walter
1 December 2025
Is democracy more likely to perish from within than at the hands of external enemies?
Books & arts
Will AI replace doctors?
Jacinta Halloran
18 November 2025
You’d be unwise to bet on it
Books & arts
Dizzy times
John Edwards
17 November 2025
Does the 1929 Wall Street crash hold a message for our times?
Books & arts
Finding the right words
Zora Simic
16 November 2025
Accusations that her grandmother was a communist spy or a fascist collaborator — or both — sent Lea Ypi back to Albania and into her own imagination
Books & arts
A studio of one’s own
Maria Nugent
14 November 2025
Drusilla Modjeska’s questing account of modernist artist-women in twentieth-century Europe
Books & arts
A spy in the Panthéon
Véronique Duché
11 November 2025
Audacious African-American singer, dancer and actor Josephine Baker earned her place among France’s wartime greats
Books & arts
The entertaining insurgent
Dominic Kelly
10 November 2025
Conservative activist William F. Buckley cajoled America along the road to the Reagan revolution
Essays & reportage
The marvellous world of the marvellous Alison Bechdel
Iain Topliss
10 November 2025
The cartoonist’s dazzling artwork and salty wit combine to great effect
Books & arts
The mushroom crowd
Jeremy Gans
9 November 2025
Three writers talk about what could and couldn’t be said at Erin Patterson’s murder trial
Books & arts
Love stories
Nick Haslam
3 November 2025
Done properly, psychoanalysis doesn’t provide ready answers, says practitioner Stephen Grosz
Books & arts
A gateway drug to history
Kate Fullagar
31 October 2025
The curious afterlife of Samuel Pepys’s diary
Books & arts
Dispirited voters
Glyn Davis
30 October 2025
Political dejection creates disengaged citizens, says a new synthesis of psychology, sociology and political science
Books & arts
The Indo-Pacific’s new age of power politics
Graeme Dobell
29 October 2025
Southeast Asia has moved to the centre of China–US rivalry
Books & arts
Perilous refuge
Sara Dowse
29 October 2025
Uwe Wittstock’s Marseille 1940 is a marvel of narrative art
Books & arts
One hell of a story
Mark Baker
28 October 2025
Why write a book about the Battle of Shah Wali Kot, and why now?
Books & arts
Screening multicultural Australia
Ien Ang
28 October 2025
How migrants have made their presence felt in an evolving TV landscape
Books & arts
Talking about a revolution
Marian Quartly
24 October 2025
Hope can be found in the history of Australian feminism. But what best to do next?
Books & arts
Moscow’s rights-defenders
Mark Edele
22 October 2025
A prize-winning account of Soviet-era human rights activists throws light on Putin’s Russia
Books & arts
Hunger’s legacy
Ronan McDonald
20 October 2025
Ireland’s devastating Great Famine is also part of Australia’s European history
Books & arts
Engineering China’s future
Michael Gill
17 October 2025
Sometimes the only things scarier than China’s problems are Beijing’s solutions, says seasoned observer Dan Wang
Books & arts
Ship me somewhere east of Suez…
Robin Jeffrey
16 October 2025
An impulse to recover stories from before India’s 1947 Partition yields a sweeping account of the aftermath of empire
Books & arts
Larrikins, legends and legislators
Frank Bongiorno
15 October 2025
Three new books explore the labour movement’s evolution
Books & arts
The making of the writer
Susan Sheridan
10 October 2025
Elizabeth Harrower’s two-part life
Books & arts
Now, down to business
Patrick Mullins
2 October 2025
“A catalyst, a provocation, and a reassurance”: Asa Briggs combined prolific history-writing with an extraordinary range of other activities
Books & arts
Are we counting what really counts?
Andrew Leigh
25 September 2025
Statisticians are struggling to capture the twenty-first-century economy
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