More stuff to fuel a myth of spinsters
The Brontë Myth
The Brontë Myth
Market Killing
The Delicious History of the Holiday - The British Seaside - The British on the Costa del Sol - Sunset Lives
Popular Music and Youth Culture - Inside Subculture - Sounding Out the City
Screening Culture, Viewing Politics
The Orient Strikes Back
The Photographic Art of William Henry Fox Talbot - Specimens and Marvels

How do communities in the Andes and Tibet cope with living at such high altitudes? Cynthia Beall believes it is a question of evolution. Steve Farrar reports. It was not an ideal start. En route to...
Having campaigned relentlessly for a Nobel for literature, China was outraged when one was awarded to dissident Gao Xingjian. Howard Goldblatt reflects on a controversial award. It has been said...
Above the branches of the two spreading elms, one leaning to the left and the other to the right, there was originally a stretch of shining white water, like snow which had fallen on a flat cement...
In China, his writing made him an enemy of the state. In the West, he barely sold enough books to buy cigarettes. Karen Gold profiles the enigmatic Nobel-winner Gao Xingjian. It is a good story: a...
...befriend a civil servant. Virginia Berridge discusses how scientists can turn research into public policy. In the recent panics caused by BSE, genetically modified food, food poisoning and foot-...
Means test denies medics NHS bursaries Fast-track medical students are set to lose thousands of pounds in National Health Service bursaries after a ruling that they will be means tested on...
Hebrew University hits fundraising target Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, which set out to raise 2.5 billion shekels (£416 million) in five years, has achieved its target in just three years and has...
Financial Times Nanostructures that have been imaged and analysed by US researchers at Northwestern University might make a hard coating for gears or an oxidation-resistant coating for aircraft...