Scotland's official embrace of literature reveals much about its comfortably stuck political culture, cosily immured from an increasingly illiberal world. newstatesman.com/ideas/2022/03/…
Nicola Sturgeon loves books. It says so on her Twitter bio, with her picture against a wall of colourful hardbacks.
The virtues of reading are also key to the government Sturgeon leads. There is a First Minister’s reading challenge, a nationwide project to “develop reading cultures” and encourage reading for pleasure.
The signature social policy of Sturgeon’s government, the “baby box” introduced in 2017, presents every newborn in Scotland with a free crate of “essential items, such as clothes, nappies and books”.
Viewed in a longer historical perspective, Scotland is adapting Victorian book-religion for the age of government-by-caring-vibes.
In this period of faltering religious faith, Victorian poet Matthew Arnold invented the school subject of English literature as a unifying national creed, refining middle-class taste while supposedly quelling social unrest.
If this was a defensive endeavour in Victorian Britain, a patch-up job as the dawn of mass democracy threatened to tear the social fabric, Scotland’s version is powered by hope rather than fear.
It feels more like Scotland’s introverted high-culture is comfortably stuck, while its literary scene carries an aura of exhausted optimism rather than early-days risk taking.
To actually achieve independence, Scotland and its artists will need to confront society's deepening illiberalism rather than hide away in lofty ideologies of the past, writes @hinesjumpedup. newstatesman.com/ideas/2022/03/…
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A new scheme called “Homes for Ukraine” was announced on Monday by Michael Gove, the Communities Secretary, whereby individuals, community groups, charities and businesses can put Ukrainians up for six months.
From parishioners in the Cornish village of St Mabyn to anarchist squatters occupying a sanctioned oligarch’s Belgravia mansion in the hope that it could be repurposed to house refugees, a variety of volunteers have mobilised.
In the face of Russia’s indiscriminate attack, Ukrainians’ care for their animals is an act of defiance. newstatesman.com/world/europe/u…
Over the past few weeks, many fleeing refugees are using an extra suitcase in order to carry their cat or dog to safety.
Photos of countless refugee cats and dogs being clung to by the newly displaced are now in circulation. In one particularly striking instance, a family took turns to carry their large, elderly German Shepherd the last 17km to the Polish border.
We have long known what oligarchy and kleptocracy meant in theory, but Russia’s savagery is forcing the UK into a national moment of recognition. newstatesman.com/culture/books/…
So how exactly does the UK prop up Putin’s gangster state?
🟥Firstly, Slapps (“strategic lawsuits against public participation”) - intimidatory actions brought against journalists for reporting on the business dealings of Russian oligarchs such as Roman Abramovich and their associated entities.
"To me and my friends, “he cried on me” was a new-found base in physical intimacy – I suppose this is because it felt like an antidote to years of “toxic masculinity” and the associated pressure on men to be “hard” and not talk about their mental health."
"You could tell that a lot of men have clocked this hype on the second season of Love is Blind, the Netflix reality dating show that has become popular among millennials."
Brexit, in its original form, is dead: killed by the new geopolitical realities created by the war in Ukraine. newstatesman.com/comment/2022/0…
"I doubt that the UK will rejoin the EU anytime soon, but its whole attitude to Europe will have to change – on defence, on energy and even on trade itself." | Writes @paulmasonnews
Brexit, Boris Johnson said, had set Britain free: “free to tread our own path, blessed with a global network of friends and partners, and with the opportunity to forge new and deeper relationships.”
Months after the fall of Kabul, thousands of Afghans are stuck in UK hotels - This article is FREE to read newstatesman.com/afghanistan/20…
On 29 August, two days after Marwa and her family arrived in the UK, the British government announced a resettlement package for the 8,000 Afghans airlifted out of the country as Kabul fell.
It dubbed the plan “Operation Warm Welcome”. Those resettled to the UK via official routes – including the Afghans who worked for the British government and had been relocated earlier in the year – would be granted indefinite leave to remain, it said.