How British Theatre Censorship Laws Have Inadvertently Created A Rich Archive Of Black History

Britain’s historical licensing of plays by Black theatre-makers has inadvertently produced an extensive historical archive of surveillance and censorship.
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Britain’s historical licensing of plays by Black theatre-makers has inadvertently produced an extensive historical archive of surveillance and censorship.
On Saturday 21 Jan 2023, St John’s Interdisciplinary Psychoanalysis seminar (Oxford University) is hosting a workshop on Richard Wollheim’s “The Good Self and the Bad Self: the Moral Psychology of British Idealism and the English School of Psychoanalysis compared”
Hockney’s 20 Flowers and Some Bigger Pictures depict joy in the humdrum of domesticity.
What happened to the predicted red wave in the US midterms?
Analysis shows 21 out of 30 countries on the UK government’s list of repressive regimes received UK military equipment.
There’s still time to avert the worst of climate change.
Are betting markets better at predicting election results than opinion polls?
In this contribution to Bulletin 26, Steve Graby reflects on their research into disabled people’s involvement in co-operatives in Britain.
In this contribution to Bulletin 26, Elizabeth Evans speaks to the barriers disabled people face when seeking to run for political office in Britain and explores the implications this carries for questions of justice and representation.
In this contribution to Bulletin 26, Craig Jones argues that large-scale injury and maiming are defining features of war and settler-colonial occupation and focusses on Gaza to explore this relation theoretically.