The Only Way is Essex

Essex both famous and notorious, the stuff of tabloid headlines and reality television, consume culture and right-wing politicians, England’s dark id. Essex is also the secret place with a rich history of smugglers and private islands, aritists and radicals, myths and legends. Essex is where the Peasants Revolt began and the Empire Windrush docked and political movements like Brexit to cultural events like TOWIE where Essex leads, the rest of us often follow. The Invention of Essex shows that there is more to this fabled English country than meets the eye. Tim Burrows explains “It’s the New Jersey of England … Continue reading The Only Way is Essex

Ghosts of Empire

In 1900 a bunch of Russians boarded Moscow train bound to Paris and at the same time another train full of Parisians left for Moscow. The trains simultaneously reached Warsaw and Paris and the passengers in both trains were convinced that they have reached their destination. For Russians, Warsaw looked as glamorous as the Paris they imagined and for the Parisians, Warsaw looked  as alien and exotic as they imagined Moscow to be. Central Europe is also a region of shared experience of mutual borrowings, impositions and misapprehensions. Right from the Roman Empire onwards, it has been the target of  … Continue reading Ghosts of Empire

Sexual theraphy?

Jen Beagin’s new funny novel is set in Hudson, the small town in upstate New York where she lives, known as Brooklyn of the Hudson Valley, its inhabitants are “better-looking than average” and dress “like boutique farmers”, like Brentwood in Essex, East of England, surrounded by open countryside and woodland. Big Swiss is Greta’s nickname, who is tall, and is from Switzerland. Great dressed top to toe in white, that adorable gap between her two front teeth, her penetrating blue eyes. She;s head-turnger, including the heads of infants and dogs. Greta (45), is working in a pharmacy in Los Angeles … Continue reading Sexual theraphy?

Early 18th-century life

One Day Ian Marchant, noted for his books on music, railways, pubs decided to dig around his family history, and stumbled on his seven-times-great great-grandfather, Thomas Marchant had left a detailed diary from 1714 to 1728. Thomas who like a drink and a game of cards  gave fascinating and immersive detail about his family farm and fishponds; about dung, horses and mud; about beer, the wife’s nights out, his own job troubles and their shared worries for their children. Ian focuses on the diarist, a Sussex  Yeoman born in 1676 and discovers beyond the Sussex diary’s bucolic portrait, a subtext … Continue reading Early 18th-century life

Inevitability of political betrayal

Westminster in the 2020s where the business of governing is the lasting on the agenda for anyone worth their salt. In the SW1 bubble, politics moves fast, schemes are hatched and foiled – through both accident and conspiracy within hours, and sex and power preside. When Bobby Cliveden decides to campaign against the closure of her local mental health unit, she secretly thought it would take her straight to the heart of the UK’s bustling political centre. She heads to London to work for her local MP, the ambitious Simon Daly, and moves in with her two old university friends, … Continue reading Inevitability of political betrayal

Europeans keen to constrain US’s unilateral tendencies

Martin Daunton scrutinises the swings of the pendulum over ninety years of democracy, national self-determination and globalization. He examines the epic history of money, trade and development and how the shifting political balance in the US is changing the agenda of global economic policy over the last ninety years between economic nationalism and globalization, explaining in detail why one economic order breaks down and how another one is built, in a. wide ranging history of institutions and individuals who have managed the global economy. Biden administration is unpicking globalization as we have known it in the Trump era. This multilateral … Continue reading Europeans keen to constrain US’s unilateral tendencies

Uncovering of erased history

This is the story of sixteen determined women scientists who used the power of the collective and the tools of science to inspire ongoing radical change, and their fight for equality at MIT. These women entered the work force in the 1960s during the push for affirmative action. Embarking on their careers they thought that discrimination against women was a thing of the past and that science was pure meritocracy. These women were marginalized and minimized especially as they grew older, their contributions stolen and erased. Kate Zernike, an Pulitzer Prize winning journalist  for the New York Times correspondent, who … Continue reading Uncovering of erased history

India’s economy set to overtake Germany and Japan

Emerging superpower India, now the world’s fifth largest economy, is set to overtake Germany and Japan as the third largest economy. India last month overtook China as the world’s most populous country, with a population the UN estimates will reach 1.428bn by next couple of months. India might profit from the demographic dividend of its still youthful population at a time of global business’s post-pandemic realignment of supply chains away from China.  During its G20 presidency, Modi’s government has championed the notion that India’s moment as a leading world economy has arrived. The critics, however, point out that India has … Continue reading India’s economy set to overtake Germany and Japan

Art of turning Idleness into a way of life

Morimoto in Rental Person who does nothing, chronicles his unique experiences in his line of work and reflects on how we consider relationships, job, and family in our search for meaningful connection and purpose in life. Morimoto was constantly being told that he was a do-nothing because he lacked initiative which resulted him being dispirited and unemployed. It then occurred to him, if he was so good at doing nothing, perhaps he could turn into a business, and tweet later, he began his business of renting himself out … to do nothing. The mere idea of working accomplishing tasks, being … Continue reading Art of turning Idleness into a way of life