Categories
Reviews
Defending Animal Rights by Tom Regan
Lisa Kemmerer cheers on Tom Regan as he defends the idea of animals having rights.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Dreaming Souls by Owen Flanagan
Ilya Farber discovers a dream of a book by the quirky and perceptive Owen Flanagan.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Together
Thomas Wartenberg watches a radical movie about some unlikely couples grappling with homophobia, feminist ideology and each other in a 1970s Swedish commune… and enjoys it!
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Body Worlds, The Atlantis Gallery, London
Chris Bloor found Body Worlds, an unusual show of dead bodies in London, to be essential viewing.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Simone Weil by Francine du Plessix Gray
When the brilliant, tragic Simone Weil died in 1943, she was only 34, but her ideas still inspire. Martin Andic ponders a new biography by Francine du Plessix Gray.
[Issue 35: March/April 2002]
Nosferatu
What dark secrets can vampires reveal to us about German Romanticism? Behind the rows of screaming teenagers sits Scott O’Reilly, with a bag of popcorn and the collected works of Friedrich Schelling.
[Issue 35: March/April 2002]
Films and Plays
What happens when a playwright and a theater director make a movie? Our film critic Thomas Wartenberg recently found out, and it led him to ponder the less obvious differences between films and plays.
[Issue 34: December 2001 / January 2002]
The Ethics of Star Trek by Barad & Robertson
Ken Marsalek is confronted by a bunch of Socratic starship captains in The Ethics of Star Trek.
[Issue 34: December 2001 / January 2002]
Wagner and Philosophy by Bryan Magee
Ralph Blumenau devours Bryan Magee’s new book about Wagner the philosophical composer.
[Issue 34: December 2001 / January 2002]
Memento
Does Hollywood sometimes get everything back-to-front? A new film called Memento certainly does. Our movie maestro Thomas Wartenberg takes a look.
[Issue 33: September/October 2001]
Previous | 1 | ... | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | ... | 55 | Next |