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Don't be fooled. The money is there to avoid cuts to tax credits

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The Conservatives have made a choice - to hand tax cuts to the rich - and balance the books on the back of the poorest. 

Is it right to say that closing the deficit requires that we tackle tax credits, a measure which on any view will hit the poorest hardest?

Here’s the section in the Summer Budget Red Book which identified the savings from – freezing, limiting entitlement to, increasing the taper rate of and reducing income thresholds for – tax credits.

If you add up the final column (which shows the savings for 2020-21) excluding the benefit cap (a separate measure) you reach a figure of £9.735bn. Obviously that number takes in also some measures not connected with tax credits but as the savings are not dis-aggregated between these different measures I’ll assume against myself that everything under these headings relates to tax credits.

How else might that £9.735bn be funded?

Here are some other measures. These are also taken from the same Summer Budget (and again the last column relates to 2020-21). Where necessary, I’ve added a little narrative.

The Conservatives pledged in their manifesto to increase the personal allowance to £12,500. Were they to do that the IFS estimated (see page 14) the cost in 2020-21 to be £4bn. Let’s assume they deliver on this manifesto pledge.

Of this manifesto pledge, the IFS observed (although the emphasis is mine):

In part because so many people do not pay income tax, and in part because the biggest gainers are two-earner couples where both can benefit from the higher allowance, increases in the personal allowance benefit those in the middle and upper-middle parts of the income distribution the most.

Again, the Conservatives pledged in their manifesto to increase the higher rate threshold to £50,000. Were they to do that the IFS estimated (see page 15) the cost in 2020-21 to be £1.9bn. Let’s assume they deliver on this manifesto pledge. 

(And it’s worth noting that this yearthe higher rate of income tax will be paid only by the 5 million highest earners in the country: see table 2.5 for 2015-16).

This measure hardly requires explanation. But HMRC’s latest inheritance tax release shows that (in 2012-13 the latest year for which the figure is given) Inheritance Tax was paid by only 17,917 estates.

At 20 per cent, we have the lowest rate of corporation tax in the G20, alongside Russia and Turkey. The case for decreasing it to 18 per cent is not easy to see. More on this for those interested here.

Add those sums together and you arrive at £9.3bn – within fiscal spitting distance of the £9.735bn figure above.

If you’re a stickler, I’ll take you back to the 2014 Autumn Statement (the final column here relates to 2019-20 but, again, ignore this difference), to the reforms to stamp duty - measures that disproportionately benefit buy-to-let landlords.

And voila. You’re over the top.

Of course there’s an ideological decision being made as to how the deficit should be closed.

This piece originally appeared on Jolyon Maugham's blog

 

Photo: Getty Images

Pro-Corbyn group Momentum vows to resist SWP "infiltration"

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New organisation rebukes the Socialist Workers Party after it calls for its members to attend meetings. 

When new group Momentum was launched by Jeremy Corbyn supporters, Labour MPs were immediately alarmed by its decision to allow non-party members to sign up. This, they warned, risked far-left entryism and the creation of a Militant-style "party within a party". 

Their fears were given greater credence yesterday by the announcement by the Socialist Workers Party, the most loathed Trotskyist groupuscule, that it intends to participate in Momentum. The SWP's "Party Notes" stated: "There are also various initiatives to re-launch the Labour left. Momentum which has the backing of a group of newly elected Corbyn-supporting MPs such as Clive Lewis and Richard Burgon, looks like it might be the most significant to date (Corbyn and McDonnell have also made supporting statements backing it). It does not seem restricted to Labour members, though it says it will aim to encourage people to join Labour. We should go along to any local Momentum meetings with the aim of taking part as open SWP members, suggesting joint activity, and sign up to be on the email lists. A launch meeting in Manchester last week attracted 70 people, many of them new and comrades had a friendly response when they raised common activity."

For Momentum's Labour supporters, the involvement of the SWP (see Edward Platt's 2014 NS piece for an account of the party's multiple woes) would be a political catastrophe. Indeed, it is precisely because the SWP recognises that its participation would discredit the group that it has adopted this strategy. It intends to support Momentum as the noose supports a hanged man. 

It is notable, then, that the group's founders have moved swiftly to repudiate the SWP. An article on Left Futures, the site edited by Momentum director Jon Lansman, declares: "There are extremely good reasons why the SWP and my erstwhile comrades in the Socialist Party should be told to sling their hook when they try and get involved. A passing acquaintance with them is all it takes to understand that they’re fundamentally uninterested in building the wider labour movement, let alone the Labour Party – which is one of Momentum‘s explicit objectives. During the summer the SWP looked upon stormin’ Corbyn with indifference and barely any comment. For the Socialist Party, because Labour was a “capitalist party” Jeremy couldn’t possibly win and it was dead as far as socialist politics were concerned." 

After Progress director Richard Angell called on Momentum to "make clear they are opposed to the infiltration of Labour by the SWP and they are neither welcome at their meetings not in their policy making", a spokesperson for the group said: "We oppose the infiltration of the Labour Party by the SWP and we would like to meet with Progress and other groups within the Labour Party soon to build constructive relations."

But the suspicion that Momentum will be infiltrated by hostile left-wingers is likely to endure. If SWP members are to be formally excluded from meetings, the new fear is that its activists go undercover (though it is worth recalling how few there now are). Shadow minister Clive Lewis, a Momentum director, told me this week: "If people are concerned about Momentum, all I would say is judge it on what it does." But for Labour MPs, the jury will remain out for some time. 

Getty Images.

Distance makes the heart grow fonder

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I held the rock in my hand during the crossing, an anchor to Earth that would remind me of its granular, varied textures and colours, even as I saw the entirety in abstract patterns from above.

In June 1965 the American astronaut Ed White walked in space for 20 minutes. Images of this event exist but what they do not show is just how fast the Gemini IV craft from which he emerged was travelling (about 17,000 miles per hour), or the complexities of managing both exit and re-entry from the speeding vehicle with a 25-foot tether strapped to his suit.

It was a highly risky manoeuvre but White was untroubled by any sense of danger. Instead, as he gazed down, he experienced a kind of elation. “I can sit out here and see the whole California coast,” he said, as he shot the still images he brought back from space. By the time his 20 minutes were up, he was gazing down at Florida and “the island chain of Cuba and Puerto Rico”. When the flight director informed him that he had to return to Gemini immediately, he remarked, “It’s the saddest moment of my life.”

It is not hard to understand why. Those who have walked in space since recount their exhilaration at seeing an entire continent or, even better, both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, in a single glance. They also report a tenderness for Earth that stays with them long after their promenade in the ether is done.

Most of us will never have the opportunity to see the planet with such an all-encompassing gaze. Yet, for me, the experience of looking out of an aeroplane window over Greenland’s snowy heights, or crossing the seemingly endless expanse of Australia’s Northern Territory, or coming in with the dawn to the Río de la Plata’s wide, shimmering delta, seems to me a comparable pleasure, even after a lifetime of air miles.

As I write this, I am crossing the Baltic, that ghost of a sea beloved of poets such as Tomas Tranströmer and Joseph Brodsky, an expanse of grey where, at six in the evening, on any autumn day, there is a shade of mauve on the horizon that you will not find anywhere else. At such times, I feel something like a space traveller’s tenderness for my planet and the extraordinary sensation of privilege just in being here.

The day before I left Sydney to cross the continent she loved, a friend gave me a lump of rock from the Northern Territory, a beautiful yet commonplace object, one chunk of that unimaginably massive hinterland, shot through with an impossible mineral blue. She told me that I should hold it in my hand during the crossing, an anchor to Earth that would remind me of its granular, varied textures and colours, even as I saw the entirety in abstract patterns from above. Dreaming, she explained, is composed equally of these two perspectives, of the particular physical detail and the unending sweep of land and time.

I did as she instructed and it was a magical sensation. Yet its full significance didn’t hit me until the last leg of the journey, when I flew home after a short stop in Asia.

Now, I was descending into what, for me, was familiar terrain: the southern Scottish uplands fading into night. It was a country I have often been guilty of taking for granted – but that night, as I looked and looked again, I saw the land with new eyes.

Darkness was descending and for miles there was nothing to see but the varieties of domestic light: lamps coming on in the windows of country kitchens, a back door leaching gold into the first hour of darkness, torchlight tracing a hill path through gorse and fallen stones. Then, as we dipped lower, I saw something white that I couldn’t make out, though a moment later I could. It was a sheet, left out on the line and forgotten, reflecting the lights of a tractor where the driver had stopped to open the five-bar gate to a home farm’s yard. Nothing could be more ordinary but, in that moment, in the context of the planet, it was unforgettably real.

Ann Ronan Pictures/Print Collector/Getty

Throwing up the dead: the novelists mimicking Ian Fleming and Stieg Larsson

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Anthony Horowitz and David Lagercrantz have produced two crime novels that stick to the tried and tested formulas.

Most novels are, of course, derivative puke, and most novelists no better or worse than the book dealer Nicholas Lane, who at the beginning of Iain Sinclair’s White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings (1987) – a great book, the ur-book beneath and behind all Sinclair’s superfluent um-and-er books – sits “on severely angled knees”, gazing upon “the partly fermented haddock, mixed with mucus, that poured from his throat, that hooked itself, bracken-coloured, over the tough spears of roadside grass”. Welcome to the colourful world of letters – a rich, ­regurgitated bouillabaisse of imitation, plagiarism, forgery and lies.

The capacity to absorb and ingest vast and heterogeneous amounts of material and then to throw it all up again in vividly colourful new patterns is an essential skill for novelists; more essential, frankly, than any fundamental ability or interest in telling stories, and certainly more important than having profound ideas and opinions about the meaning of life. All the greatest novelists are first and foremost great regurgitators and gastromancers: Cervantes, Sterne, Austen, Dickens. They are also excellent mimics. Even Virginia Woolf was at her best when imitating herself – which was no mean feat (the great temptation for writers, as for all artists, is to turn into one’s own tribute act, a burlesque show, mimicking one’s own mannerisms. “Celebrity is a mask that eats into the face,” writes John Updike in his memoir, Self-Consciousness).

So, all novelists are amateur mimics, but some become professional impersonators and get paid to perform or reprise specific roles: Sebastian Faulks doing Bond, Sophie Hannah giving us her Agatha Christie. Like Cumberbatch’s Hamlet, this is the equivalent of the West End star turn. It is by no means a new trick and there are indeed many similar publishing practices, such as the completion of an author’s unfinished manuscript, or the unveiling of a work never intended for publication – all of which enterprises might be regarded as either entirely dubious or utterly magnificent. Some people just can’t get enough Harper Lee. Or David Foster Wallace.

This brings us to the bold and daring antics of two prize impersonators, Anthony Horowitz and David Lagercrantz. Both men have form as ventriloquists: Lagercrantz, a Swedish journalist, is credited with co-authoring the autobiography of the Paris Saint-Germain striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic – which is absolutely excellent, if you’re a fan of footballers’ autobiographies – and Horowitz has already given us his Sherlock Holmes in the Conan Doyle Estate-authorised The House of Silk (2011). Now Lagercrantz reprises Stieg Larsson’s Lisbeth Salander with The Girl in the Spider’s Web and Horowitz does his Bond in Trigger Mortis.

It’s the less well-known Lagercrantz who perhaps achieves maximum intensity in his performance, though this is only because of the maximum intensity already achieved by Larsson’s celebrated Millennium trilogy of novels, which are magnificent, hallucinatory, paranoid visions of a world lost to corruption and violence, with the tattooed Lisbeth and the dishevelled investigative journalist Blomkvist as avenging angels.

As in the Larsson trilogy, The Girl in the Spider’s Web continually digresses and diverts into dead ends and detours, with paragraph upon paragraph detailing minor characters’ backstories. The plot is fabulously complicated, the pace frenetic, the personal is political, the physical violence an expression of emotional and intellectual turmoil. All in all, the book is as lively and strange as any Larsson.

Trigger Mortis (despite the punning title) is much cooler and more restrained in comparison. Nordic noir it most certainly is not. But then the original Fleming novels are much cooler and more restrained than one perhaps remembers: the Bond books are not the Bond films. Fleming’s best work was possessed of a rather insouciant tone, almost reminiscent of the work of a stylist such as Osbert Lancaster; a wry, weary, mid-century tone that Horowitz captures exactly. This is Miss Moneypenny: “She was watering a potted plant – an aspidistra – that was a recent addition to her desk and she looked up and smiled. She liked Bond and she didn’t mind that he knew it.” Potted plants, thwarted desires. There is certainly none of the dismal, tormented Bond evident in the recent Daniel Craig incarnation.

Both novels stick to the tried and tested formulas: Lisbeth and Blomkvist are once again investigating a conspiracy that goes to the very heart of Swedish society; Bond is once again up against SMERSH and the Soviets, involved in a race against time (in this instance quite literally a race against time, at a Grand Prix, and with a nail-biting space-race countdown). And this is right and proper: the first responsibility of the writer in any genre is to learn the formula. However, it is only ever the minimum requirement. The good writer goes further. Samuel Johnson, in his Dictionary in 1755, dismissed the mimic as “A ludicrous imitator; a buffoon who copies another’s act or manner so as to excite laughter”. Boswell – Johnson’s mini-me – came much closer to the truth, in imagined conversation in The Life of Samuel Johnson (1791). “It is amazing how a mimic can not only give you the gestures and voice of a person whom he represents; but even what a person would say on any particular subject.”

The true mimic is no mere parrot or performing monkey. The best are bone-conjurors, bringing back the voices of the dead, able to express what a person would say about anything you can think of. Horowitz and Lagercrantz are in this club of crafty necromancers. What the dead might make of this I have no idea, although there’s been much controversy over the publication of the Lagercrantz – some members of Larsson’s family are distinctly unimpressed. But what are we supposed to do? Let sleeping Larssons lie? Let the long-flown Fleming well alone? Be satisfied with what we have and not ask for more?

When Saul persuades a medium to conjure up the spirit of the dead prophet Samuel in the Bible, Samuel is none too pleased. “Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up?” he asks. Why indeed? Then again, why not? Surely the dead are there to disquiet us, and to be disquieted. Me, I’d give anything for one more Richmal Crompton.

The Girl in the Spider’s Web by David Lagercrantz is published by MacLehose Press (448pp, £19.99). Trigger Mortis: a James Bond Novel by Anthony Horowitz is published by Orion (320pp, £18.99).

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The SNP's conference is friendly, rousing – and boring. Just what the party wants

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There has been little drama at the Nationalists' autumn meeting in Aberdeen. Bad for journalists - great for the party.

It's my first time at SNP conference - and I don't think I'm alone. Every time I bump into a veteran journalist or activist here at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre, they tell me how much bigger - and more corporate - the event has become. The presence of lobbyists from McDonalds has become the symbol of the SNP's elevation from insurgent to incumbent. "A few years ago, all the exhibitors were in a marquee because there wasn't room for them," one campaigner tells me. "Now there are only two venues in Scotland big enough for the SNP - this, and the SECC [in Glasgow]." (That must wound the Lib Dems a little: last year they held their autumn conference at the SECC. Now the Nationalists have seven times as many as MPs as they do, and instead they decamped to the less imposing surroundings of Bournemouth.)

The atmosphere is still laidback - there are no spitting protesters, no big fences, and the security at the entrance is minimal. Nicola Sturgeon has been roaming the conference floor, having her photo taken with anyone and everyone, rather than hiding out in her hotel room. 

The entrance, free from protesters and heavy-handed security.

The one thing this conference isn't is exciting. "Another news-free fringe," sighed one journalist, returning to the press zone (actually a tent out the back of the arena). There was a moment of excitement when we all rushed into the hall yesterday to hear Alex Salmond set out the party's position on Syria. "There is no one in Syria who is not being bombed by someone," he told the conference. For that reason, he wants "no more futile military interventions", and his short speech mentioned the duration of the war in Afghanistan and the lack of money set aside for reconstruction in Libya. This opens up an intriguing dividing line with Jeremy Corbyn's Labour, after shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn indicated that he was open to supporting military action in Syria. Could the SNP outflank Corbyn, a former chair of Stop the War, in their dovishness?

Listening to Alex Salmond talk about Syria.

The only other (minor) disagreements came on land reform and fracking. Delegates wanted the former to be more radical, and rejected calls for an outright ban on the latter. But overall, any tensions were well submerged. I even chaired a fringe on Palestine - a subject which reliably provokes fiery debate - with barely a murmur of disagreement between the panel or from the floor.

Salmond takes to the airwaves.

More evidence of the straight-laced nature of the conference is the lack of colourful characters. So far the closest I've come to the kind of eccentric excitement you get from Kippers and Lib Dems is this group of people in raspberry berets and a man in a tartan suit. Oh, and I did see a man fish a business card out of his sporran earlier. 

A few berets add some colour.

Overall, the impression is of a focused, even controlled party - one that knows what it wants, and is still on the rise. Yes, journalists might be left wistful for the sheer amount of stories that are coming out of Labour right now. But Sturgeon, and the SNP, would rather be credible than chaotically interesting. 

The front cover of Holyrood magazine. 

Nicola Sturgeon’s speech evoked Labour’s divisions in a renewed call for independence

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The SNP leader’s speech to her partys conference was a highly political call for Scottish independence by emphasising the SNPs unity, and Labours inability to define itself.

Nicola Sturgeon launched a renewed call for Scottish independence in her speech to the SNP annual conference.

Introduced as “the leader of the most united political party in the United Kingdom”, she focused on the confusion and lack of definition the Labour party is suffering in Westminster to underline the need for Scotland to be independent – framing it as the country’s only chance to escape Tory rule.

She reasserted the status of the SNP as a left-wing, social democratic party – a “credible” one, in contrast with Labour, which she claimed was going “deeper and deeper into the political wilderness”.

She said:

“Labour’s failure to meet even the basic requirements of effective oppositions – to be united and credible as an alternative government – should make them deeply ashamed of themselves.

“Their disunity threatens to consign the UK to another decade of Tory government.

“That’s a tragedy for people all across the UK.

“But for more and more people in Scotland, Labour’s inability to mount a credible challenge for government will bring into sharp focus this fundamental truth.

“The only real and lasting alternative to Tory governments that we don’t vote for is independence for our country.”

The speech seemed designed to tell Scottish voters that Labour is now a spent force – and therefore independence is their only chance to avoid being ruled by future Conservative governments.

This marks a change in tone from the party’s general election campaign, during which it underplayed its desire for a second independence referendum and focused instead on gaining a mandate to hold the government to account in Westminster.

Sturgeon also concentrated on subjects that could trip Labour up in future Commons votes. For example, she reiterated the SNP’s staunch opposition to renewing Trident and announced that her party would vote against military intervention in Syria – both subjects that divide the shadow cabinet and exacerbate the tensions of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership.

Indeed, throughout her speech, Sturgeon appeared to target her criticism at the Tory government and Labour opposition in Westminster. She did not attack her Scottish rivals Kezia Dugdale and Ruth Davidson, but saved her fire for Corbyn and David Cameron.

And there was positivity too. In an upbeat recitation of her party's triumphs, Sturgeon said that the SNP had “won the general election”. She also joked that she was delighted when the Daily Mail branded her “the most dangerous woman in Britain”, adding, “that does remain, by far, the nicest thing the Daily Mail has ever said about me”.

The Mail will surely be trembling further after this revitalised and highly political encouragement for the independence cause.

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Theatrical knotweed: Margaret Drabble journeys around Shakespeare’s globe

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It is hard to characterise Andrew Dickson’s Worlds Elsewhereit is a discursive, rambling, global volume.

This is an extraordinarily exhilarating book. It is like no other Shakespeare criticism you have ever read, and it takes you into unimagined realms of speculation. Andrew Dickson, like Puck, has put a girdle round about the earth, and brought back performances of Richard III among the rattlesnakes in California, King Lear with live pigs in Munich, a putative Hamlet in 1607 in Sierra Leone by a ship’s crew aboard the Dragon, a Marxist interpretation of Timon in Beijing and a Cantonese performance of The Taming of the Shrew in Hong Kong, complete with Triad trilbies and vampish high heels. Most of the time our narrator-guide is having a great deal of fun, though his travels are not always comfortable, his accommodation is sometimes challenging, and he occasionally feels himself to be a lonely traveller, with only Shakespeare as his friend. But however bizarre his encounters, he is a serious scholar, and his cross-cultural insights into Shakespeare are remarkable.

Dickson’s project was in part inspired by the multilingual performances from nearly 50 countries that made up the World Shakespeare Festival in London in 2012, which ran parallel with the Olympics. Watching The Comedy of Errors played by Afghans, he wondered why the troupe had chosen this play, found good reasons (connected with exile, loss and separation) and in due course set out to travel in search of the multiple meanings of the world’s greatest playwright. It is a romantic, joyous, if at times (for him) exhausting exploration, and our hero (the picaresque vocabulary seems to come naturally) is an emotional witness, on a sentimental journey, easily moved to tears, particularly by the late plays.

He engages with all those he meets, from divas and directors to students and scholars, and has a light but expert hand with the travelogue aspect of his task, evoking landscapes and skyscapes as well as theatres and performances and libraries. The sprawling townships of the American Midwest, Cape Town’s Table Mountain and Robben Island, and the cultural citadel of Weimar (so sinisterly close to Buchenwald) are drawn with a painterly eye and much sociological curiosity. He’s very good on the topography and the place names of the desolate: Lady Bug Lane, Stagecoach Way, Nugget Lane, Black Bear Lane, Slave Girl Lane . . .

There is a fine pen portrait of snowy Gdansk, in Poland, with its skies the blue of raw silk, its bruisingly cold air, its teetering spires and towers and busy cranes, and its roofs, “toffee-coloured [with] a gleam of verdigris”. Here Dickson encounters another romantic, my old friend Jerzy Limon, whom I met long ago in the heady days of Solidarnosc. At that time, as a young scholar, he was dreaming of building a replica of Shakespeare’s Globe in honour of travelling players from England, forced from their native land by Puritanism and censorship. It seemed for decades a cloud-capped fantasy but the theatre is now built, not quite as originally planned, but prospering. The power of dreams has turned it into a magnificent edifice of menacing black brick, with a retractable roof, and galleries “finished in gleaming honey-coloured birch and beech”.

In his search for the reasons why so many countries have fallen under Shakespeare’s spell and made him their own – by a sometimes dangerous process that the Germans call “nostrification” – Dickson points out that the playwright, who as far as we know never left England, set a remarkable proportion of his dramas abroad. The Forest of Arden and Bosworth Field are represented, but so are Italy, Denmark, France, Germany, Spain, Greece, Turkey, Egypt, ancient Rome and the newly discovered islands of the Indies: his world is much wider than that of the city-based Dekker and Middleton. Dickson notes that adaptations of The Merchant of Venice have been hugely popular in India and China despite the unfamiliarity of the religious and cultural backdrop – is this in some way connected, he wonders, with the racially mixed populations of the great trading ports of Kolkata and Shanghai? Do they see Venice as an image of their own cities? The Germans, of course, admired Hamlet, and thought they had ­written it themselves. The adoption of Othello by South Africa needs little explanation, although the play has caused endless difficulties there: there is a good account of Janet Suzman’s explosive 1987 production with Joanna Weinberg and the black star John Kani. But my favourite example of national favouritism is in the US chapter, “Buried Richards”, which takes us from the stifling atmosphere of the Folger Library and out on to the road. The Americans loved Richard III. Why? Because Dick Crookback was “the villainous victor, the ultimate go-getting, self-reliant, self-made man”. The booze-addicted actor Junius Brutus Booth, greatly admired by Walt Whitman, was often so carried away by this role on tour that he would refuse to die at Bosworth: Booth would, it is alleged, pursue his enemies off the stage and on to the street.

The ceaseless and often startling process of reinterpretation and reinvention, the “liquid modernity” of the Bard as a trans-national brand, the “rhizomatic” spread of “Shakespeare” as a living organism (or, less flatteringly, as the “Japanese knotweed” of culture), are contemporary critical concepts explored with panache. But the theories are illustrated by and interwoven with many human stories: particularly touching is the account of the dedicated life of Solomon Plaatje, journalist, linguist and political activist (1876-1932), who translated Shakespeare’s works into Setswana. He travelled widely in Europe and the US speaking about human rights, published an important account of the cruelty of the Natives Land Act 1913 and wrote a novel in English, but his deepest passion was for Shakespeare.

Dickson pursues Plaatje and his translations down many a dusty road and through acres of scrub-grass and gravel, visiting his museum and his grave, and empathising with his lonely position, stranded between two cultures, not wholly accepted by black or white. It dawns on Dickson “that perhaps another reason he had translated Shakespeare, often at sea, was as a way of evading loneliness. Shakespeare was . . . a companion on all those ocean voyages, when his wife and children were thousands of miles away and the cause of the black South Africans looked as impossibly remote as ever.”

It is hard to characterise this discursive, rambling, global volume: it has elements of David Lodge’s Small World, with a German professor casually pinpointed by his Alfa Romeo and his black leather jacket, and a cameo of an aged Indian scholar of film lying on his daybed with his steel crutches and his straggling white hair. It’s a tragicomedy of obsessions.

I share the obsession. Like Dickson, I see and hear Shakespeare everywhere. Dickson will undoubtedly have spotted the convicted (currently appealing) Marine Sergeant ­Alexander Blackman’s reference to “shuffling off this mortal coil” in Afghanistan. And I hope he, too, saw the interview on 24 June on Channel 4 News in which a refugee, a Syrian English teacher stranded on the Calais motorway, said that his favourite English writer was Shakespeare. Which play did he like best, his interrogator asked, perhaps expecting to trip him up. Antony and Cleopatra, replied the young man instantly. And I like to think that I remember a smile of fleeting happiness upon his face.

Margaret Drabble’s most recent novel is “The Pure Gold Baby” (Canongate)

Worlds Elsewhere: Journeys Around Shakespeare’s Globe by Andrew Dickson is published by The Bodley Head (483pp, £20)

ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

In football, sons follow fathers, but have better hair and less hunger to win

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It’s quite eerie observing Kasper Schmeichel in goal for Leicester, playing in exactly the same position and looking the spitting image of his father, Peter, the former Man United keeper.

I was watching Derby County, quite surprised to see Tom Ince playing for them, and began thinking about him and his career. For a young player of 23, he seems to have had quite a few clubs, so you always wonder why. He made the England under-21 team quite early doors, has managed 18 caps, but doesn’t look as if he will ever make the all-conquering, top of the pops, totally fab, full England team. Hmm.

Mainly, though, I was thinking about him and his dad, Paul Ince. Paul’s career was top class – star at Man United, 53 caps for England, England’s first black captain – but he was also a bit of a brute, bad-tempered, liked to be known as the Guv’nor. He fell out with Fergie (which is always a good sign), who dismissed him as “Big-Time Charlie”.

Young Tom is slender, not bullish-framed like his dad, plays on the wing while his dad was midfield; but he does have his dad’s slightly moany countenance, as if in the dressing room he’s not a load of laughs.

This is all pure surmise – what fans do, who watch players over a long time, deciding we know their character when of course we know bugger all. In football, if you watch long enough, you also see sons following fathers, flickering on the stage like ghosts, before fading and disappearing.

It is remarkable how many sons have followed on. And very often, unlike Tom and Paul Ince, they look much the same and play in similar positions.

It’s quite eerie observing Kasper Schmeichel in goal for Leicester, playing in exactly the same position and looking the spitting image of his father, Peter, the former Man United keeper. Young Peter has had a slowish rise, lots of clubs early in his career, but now, at 28, he’s in the Prem, and in his pomp, playing for Leicester.

When you watch him, he doesn’t seem as dominant and decisive as his dad, neither as aggressive and bad-tempered nor as hungry, which is often the case with the second generation, yet he has battled through to the top. Starting off, it surely was a plus having a famous father, but it can also be a handicap, forever being compared. In football, as managers are always boringly telling us, you are only as good as your last game: reputations count for little, and relationships nothing at all.

Jamie Redknapp did better than his father, Harry – managing 17 England caps while his dad got none – but they are both fluent and smart. His cousin Frank Lampard, with 106 England caps and, tarran tarran, an OBE, also did better than his father, Frank, who managed only two caps. Frank Sr was a lumpen, dour-looking full-back, a very different footballer from his son. Young Jamie and young Frank had the benefit of a private education, so obviously they’re handsomer and have better hair, which is only what you expect, if you pay all that money.

The Hateleys – father and son, Tony and Mark – were both centre-forwards, looked and played much the same, but the younger one did better, with lots of England caps, unlike his dad. There is a third generation, Tom Hateley, son of Mark, but he is a defender, ex-Tranmere and Motherwell, last heard of in Poland.

Why does football often run in families? Ball skills do seem to be inherited, sporting genes get passed on. But children do follow parents in other walks of life. I wonder which is the job in which it happens most? Somebody must have done the research.

The acting dynasties such as the Redgraves and Foxes have been well documented. In literature we have young Martin, son of Kingsley. In the law and in medicine, I sense, it is even more common, but that is probably environment and conditioning as much as genes. Doctoring, I would say from my observations, spawns most family members. My own GP is the son of the woman who used to be my GP.

My own dear children? as you have asked. Well, we have one barrister, which was a surprise, as we know nothing about the law. One was in TV for ten years as a producer and is now a mum designing cushions. We do have a writer daughter, Caitlin, so that’s one out of three following the family tradition. Which proves . . . actually I don’t know what it proves.

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Are George Osborne’s tax credit cuts really his version of Gordon Brown's 10p tax debacle?

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Gordon Brown’s saga was the right policy, disastrous politics, catastrophic timing. In contrast, George Osborne’s episode could be seen as the wrong policy, poor politics, but perfect timing.   

“History doesn’t repeat itself but it does rhyme,” the phrase attributed to Mark Twain, is one that Westminster types like to wheel out to situate a new political saga in the context of previous conflagrations. Well, recent history is chiming right now. At least that is the prevailing view of commentators who liken George Osborne’s planned cuts to tax credits to Gordon Brown’s decision to abolish the 10p starter rate of tax in 2008.  

It’s not hard to see why. A major reform that appears to crash into the government’s narrative about itself. An impending slow-motion collision with an important part of the electorate arising from politically-charged reforms to the tax and benefit system made by an all-powerful Chancellor in a well-received budget that, with the passing of time, lost its shine in the face of a campaign led by some of those who once led the applause.

Add to this the fact that ministers sent out to defend the proposed changes adopt a credibility-shredding stance of denialism about the impending losses and the feeling of deja-vu grows. Just to add to the sense of groundhog day, both episodes feature a cameo for Frank Field MP as agitator-in-chief-cum-hopeful deal-maker.

Look closer, however, and the differences reveal as much as the similarities. What’s more, they tell us something about the nature of the political dynamic that George Osborne is dealing with and how it may play out.

In some respects, the Chancellor’s problem is far bigger than Gordon Brown’s ever was. Above all, the losses facing the working poor are much more severe; in fact, roughly five times so, more for many households. Looking back at the 10p tax debacle it is hard not to be struck by how the losses involved pale in comparison (a maximum loss of £232, with the clear majority gaining).

The identity of those losers is different too: now it’s overwhelmingly low and modest income working families with children; in 2008 it was low-earning fifty somethings and early retirees, neither of whom qualified for the compensating tax credit increases or pensioner boosts. And the judgement of influential independent experts varies too: the 10p tax rate was always viewed suspiciously by many tax-specialists (like the IFS) who didn’t mourn its passing; the same couldn’t be said about in-work tax credits that often make employment worthwhile. 

But in important regards, Osborne’s political discomfort is less acute. Context is often king in terms of how these budget backlashes play out. And for Osborne, the context is dramatically more benign then it was for Brown. By the time the 10p tax rate was abolished, the Labour government was already on the ropes, Brown was still reeling from the "non-election" disaster, and David Cameron was looking ever more prime ministerial.

The internal party dynamics are sharply different too. In 2008, an already downbeat and highly agitated Parliamentary Labour Party reacted viscerally to the abolition of the 10p rate on the basis that they judged it hurt "our people" (and further demotivated activists ahead of a tough election). If large scale palliatives hadn’t been offered up, Brown and Alistair Darling would have faced a full-scale parliamentary riot led by their own side. 

By contrast, today’s Tory backbenchers, despite their small majority, are generally feeling chipper about the overall state of politics, even if they are increasingly angsty on this particular issue. They know for sure the next election is miles away and few have much love for a tax credit system they didn’t invent.  

And, crucially, there are differences in the nature of the potential escape routes. The parliamentary uprising against the proposal to abolish the 10p tax rate set up a big, bad, binary choice for Brown: undertake a vaulting U-turn by keeping the 10p rate or plough on regardless and scrap it. There wasn’t a viable halfway house. (Sure, a highly expensive increase in the personal tax allowance was made to help compensate those who lost out, but it never really commanded the headlines).

Today, it’s different. Relatively few people – politicians and journalists included – really understand tax credits: the language of "tapers" and "earnings disregards" creates a thick fog around them which provides Osborne with cover to say he is sticking to the plan at the same time as he softens the blow.

When Osborne acts in next month’s Autumn Statement, as he surely will, there will be plenty of scope in the media for messiness and misunderstanding about what the Chancellor has really done.

With the benefit of hindsight, Brown’s saga now looks like a case of: right policy, disastrous politics, catastrophic timing. In contrast, Osborne’s episode might be characterised as: wrong policy, poor politics, perfect timing.   

None of which is to say that Osborne doesn’t face a toxic problem. Either his "One Nation" or his "low tax, low welfare" rhetoric is about to take a big hit. But compared to the situation Labour faced in 2008, he’s got political momentum, policy opacity and tactical room for manoeuvre on his side. They are likely to prove useful allies. 

Gavin Kelly is a former Downing Street adviser to Gordon Brown and Tony Blair. He tweets @GavinJKelly1.

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Most performers want their audiences to like them. I just want to be Stewart Lee

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Lee is perhaps the most intelligent comedian ever to tread British boards.

I’ve done a fair amount of solo performing throughout my career – in fact, I started out as a stand-up comedian, and from time to time I revisit that sort of shtick, doing little gigs in the upstairs rooms of pubs. But mostly I do “shows” of one sort or another to support the publication of my books. Time was when these public readings were convened in the big chain bookstores: Waterstones, Blackwell’s and – before its demise – Borders. Audiences might be relatively small, but they had usually chipped up because they were interested in the writing; the live act was just an add-on.

But nowadays all bookshops are in free fall and the business of literary promotion has shifted to literary festivals and gigs in small theatres (if, that is, you can put bums on seats). In line with the decline of serious solitary reading, punters demand to be entertained collectively.

I’ve lost count of the number of times I have stared out into dusty velveteen darkness at the rows of upturned faces looming up at me, pale as the caps of poisonous mushroom. At these moments, just before I zing the first one-liner out into the stalls, I try to assay the mood and tenor of the crowd: are they febrile or enervated, in the mood for laughter or tears? And, more to the point, am I febrile or enervated, in the mood for tears or laughter?

Now, I hope you noticed the subtle but important reversal in the chiasmus above: for an audience, laughter is a balm and a restorative, lifting it collectively out of the rut its massed feet have worn throughout the daily go-round: for the performer, however, laughter is always an easy way of gaining acceptance. “Laugh,” as the hoary old adage has it, “and the world laughs with you.” But really this formula should also be subject to reversal; from the isolated performer’s point of view, the important thing is that if the world is laughing, and you’re laughing as well, the world will assume you’re part of it, rather than some weirdo scam-merchant trying to pull one over.

In my experience, an audience will have both a lowest and a highest common denominator of taste and discrimination. Tell a crass joke and you may undershoot an audience’s low point; but craft too artful a witticism and it may zing over their heads rather than hitting them in the eye. In either case, there will be muttering and disaffection, and they won’t even laugh at you, let alone with. Audiences naturally long to become a single psyche surging with the same emotion; and producing this state-of-minds is the desideratum for all performers – yet woe betide he who misjudges it, because then, instead of being enfolded by the group mind, he will be abandoned to die alone in the full glare of the limelight.

Even more serious an error is misplaced seriousness. Adjudge your crowd to be too high-minded and you’ll come off looking like a pretentious prat; assay viewers too basely, and they’ll think, “You patronising dipstick.” And of course, all these judgements have to be made lightning-quick, lest the mood curdle and then go emphatically off. So, the temptation – if you’re a performer – is  always to pitch low rather than high, and always to aim for the funny-bone rather than the sensitive one. Nevertheless, the allure of this tactic needs to be resisted: for, though audiences may roar with delight, with each mass contraction of their diaphragms, you’re being repelled – because, in your sad eagerness to be liked, you’ve transformed yourself into just another puppet-cum-clown, jerking about on strings of low self-esteem.

I thought about all this the other evening when I went to see Stewart Lee’s new stand-up show at the Leicester Square Theatre in London. Lee is perhaps the most intelligent comedian ever to tread British boards, and the genius of his shtick consists in large part in his willingness to flout all the rules of mass psychology outlined above. Rather than trade on audiences’ basest inclinations, Lee seeks constantly to raise their game. He does this by denigrating them – and himself. On the evening I saw him, he continually told us we were too slow and stupid to get his jokes, and that we needn’t bother laughing, as he considered us of no account. At the same time, he presented a portrait of himself as a deeply insecure man, fed up with the thankless cycle of touring mid-sized venues, who feels an affinity with prostitutes because, like them: “I do something for people they desperately want, but they’ve nothing but contempt for me.”

This seemed like reverse psychology: what we were meant to feel as Lee berated us was that we were perspicacious enough to see through his act and appreciate his real message: namely, that we were sufficiently wise and witty to appreciate how wise and witty he is. But actually, Lee is a good enough actor to keep the other possibility open. In line with Papa Sigmund’s dictum, he isn’t joking at all, but hoodwinking us with his own ironic sensibility as he kvetches and badmouths in plain sight, cackling internally all the while. Now, the Venn intersection between these two, quite high audience denominators markedly reduces Lee’s likelihood of laughs. Not that this seems to bother him . . . Or then again, maybe it does . . .

Next week: Real Meals

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Walter Benjamin, the first pop philosopher

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Ray Monk looks at the life of Walter Benjamin, and discovers how he found his calling.

Walter Benjamin is often described as a philosopher, but you won’t find his works being taught or studied in the philosophy departments of many British or American universities – in English, modern languages, film studies and media studies, yes, but not in philosophy.

The American philosopher Stanley Cavell (who wrote a book about Hollywood comedies of the 1930s and 1940s, which is hardly the sort of thing you expect an analytic philosopher to do) was invited to a conference at Yale in 1999 to celebrate Harvard’s publication of the first volume of Benjamin’s Selected Writings. The letter of invitation had asked the prospective delegates to evaluate his contribution to their respective fields.
“. . . an honest answer to the question of Benjamin’s actual contribution to [my] field,”
Cavell declared, “is that it is roughly nil.”

That this is so is in some respects sur­prising, because there are important points of affinity between Benjamin and one of the most revered figures in the analytic tradition: Ludwig Wittgenstein. They have many things in common, but where they connect most strikingly is in their shared suspicion of theory and their emphasis on the visual. “Benjamin was not much interested in theories,” writes his friend ­Hannah Arendt in her valuable introduction to Illuminations, “or ‘ideas’ which did not immediately assume the most precise ­outward shape imaginable.” Benjamin himself once wrote: “I needn’t say anything. Merely show.” It is a remark that could just as well have been written by Wittgenstein, who, in his first book, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, emphasised the importance of the distinction between what can be said and what has to be shown, and who, in his later Philosophical Investigations, stressed the “fundamental significance” of the “understanding that consists in ‘seeing connections’”.

It would be overstating the case to say that Benjamin and Wittgenstein had similar writing styles but, linked to their shared preference for the visual over the theoretical, there is a certain similarity in their stylistic ideals, a shared aspiration to write poetically. “I think I summed up my attitude to philosophy,” Wittgenstein once wrote, “when I said that one should write philosophy only as one writes a poem.” This is exactly how Benjamin felt. When Wittgenstein writes in the preface to Philosophical Investigations that his thinking required him to “travel over a wide field of thought criss-cross in every direction” and that the philosophical remarks contained in the book “are, as it were, a number of sketches of landscapes which were made in the course of these long and involved journeyings”, he might have been describing the style of Benjamin’s 1928 book One-Way Street or his uncompleted masterpiece, the Arcades Project.

The similarities in the sensibilities of Benjamin and Wittgenstein are partly explained by their shared cultural inheritance. They were both, for one thing, great admirers of the 18th-century German scientist and aphorist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, whose work Wittgenstein often gave to his Cambridge friends, as if to spread the word of his greatness to the English-speaking world. One of the most intriguing texts collected in Radio Benjamin is a radio play that Benjamin wrote about Lichtenberg that attests to the esteem in which he held him.

There were many other writers in the German and Austrian literary tradition from which Wittgenstein and Benjamin drew their inspiration, including many who have made little impact on English-speaking philosophers, such as Franz Grillparzer, Johann Peter Hebel and Gottfried Keller. Above all, one sees in both the deep impression left on their thinking by the work of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.

Arendt writes that Benjamin’s “spiritual existence had been formed and informed by Goethe”, and one could say something similar about Wittgenstein. Both knew Goethe’s major works practically off by heart and both were profoundly influenced by his notion of morphology, a way of understanding natural phenomena, such as plants or animals, not through the application of mathematical theories but by seeing connections between different forms. It is an idea that most English-speaking philosophers find hard to take seriously but which is right at the heart of the thinking of Benjamin and Wittgenstein.

Connected with this emphasis on the role of seeing in understanding is, no doubt, another important similarity: both had a deep interest in photography and in the emerging art of the cinema, especially as practised in Hollywood. They even had favourite movie stars (Benjamin loved Katharine Hepburn, Wittgenstein adored Carmen Miranda).

Benjamin’s concern with the visual and his associated favouring of allusive, poetic writing over leaden theorising is a good way into a body of work that would otherwise be dauntingly unfamiliar. It would also, I think, make a good theme for a biography of him, one that would provide a thread to unite many aspects of his life, his thought and his very varied corpus.

Alas, Howard Eiland and Michael W Jennings have chosen not to structure their book in this way, nor indeed to make any attempt to shape their enormous body of research into a single narrative. The result is that, though there is a great deal to learn from their book, it is not a satisfying read. It is not that they, like Benjamin and Wittgenstein, prefer to present the reader with an album of sketches rather than a consecutive piece of prose. Unlike their subject, they do not aspire to poetry. Nor, indeed, do they show very much concern or proficiency with narration.

It is a great pity, because the story of Benjamin’s life could have been a very engaging and, at times, deeply moving one. He was born in 1892 in Berlin into a wealthy and thoroughly assimilated Jewish family (this being yet another thing he had in common with Wittgenstein). His father, Emil, was a successful businessman, a partner in an auction house. Somewhat against the wishes of Emil (who wanted his son to learn a useful occupation such as medicine or law), Walter decided upon leaving school to study philology and philosophy in Freiburg, which in 1912 was beginning to establish itself as the centre of the new phenomenological school of thinking led by Edmund Husserl. One of Benjamin’s fellow students at Freiburg was Husserl’s best-known follower (and later detractor), Martin Heidegger. Benjamin was not entirely happy with the education on offer at Freiburg and switched between there and the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin, where he enrolled to study philosophy.

The First World War threatened to interrupt Benjamin’s studies but he succeeded in failing the medical examination by drinking large quantities of black coffee the previous night in order to simulate the symptoms of a weak heart. He then spent much of the war in Munich, where he continued his philosophical studies and formed the ambition of becoming a university lecturer in philosophy. During this period, he wrote an essay on the nature of language which, Eiland and Jennings claim, “provides fundamental perspectives on the problematic of language that dominates 20th-century thought”. (They devote three pages to summarising these “fundamental perspectives”, but what they say is, to me at least, incomprehensible. For example: “The ‘nameless language of things’ passes through translation – at once reception and conception – into the ‘name-language of man’, which is the basis of knowledge.” If this sentence has a meaning, I cannot fathom it.)

In early 1917, the draft board ordered ­Benjamin to report for duty, but he refused, this time on the grounds that he was suf­fering from a severe case of sciatica. His ­girlfriend, Dora, had put him under hypnosis in order to produce sciatica-like symptoms; these were convincing enough to fool the military doctors, leaving Benjamin free to stay in Berlin, where he married Dora the following spring. The couple then fled to the safety of neutral Switzerland. There, he enrolled at the University of Bern, where he wrote a doctoral dissertation entitled “The Concept of Criticism in German Romanticism”.

While living in Switzerland, Benjamin and his wife had their first and only child, Stefan. For the most part, Benjamin was a neglectful father and he was never particularly close to his son. For many years, however, he did write down in a notebook the words, phrases and thoughts uttered by his son. This survives and is one of the things reproduced in the charming and beautifully produced collection Walter Benjamin’s Archive. The notebook makes wonderful ­reading, far more engaging than the author’s early philosophy. One example, chosen more or less at random:

“Mummy, tell me a story.” Oh, but I don’t feel like it right now. “Oh go on, tell one, I feel like it.” Well then, you tell one? “No—but—there—I have just thrown the feeling into your mouth—now you tell it.”

In 1919 Benjamin, Dora and Stefan left Switzerland and moved a few months later to Berlin, Benjamin still hoping to secure an academic position, first in Heidelberg, then in Frankfurt. His relationship with his wife came under pressure during this time, and they both had affairs. Eiland and Jennings, however, keep their focus mainly on his ­academic work, and by jumping around in the chronology they make it even more confusing than it would otherwise have been. The result would have been extremely difficult to follow even if Benjamin’s original prose had been transparently clear, which it emphatically was not.

The book is rescued from turgid incomprehensibility only when Benjamin, accepting that he would never get a job as an academic, starts writing in a different style. In place of unfathomable reflections on language, he started in 1924 to write about contemporary culture, with an emphasis on its more popular forms. Among other things, he wrote about film, photography, children’s literature, gambling and pornography. These pieces were sent not to academic journals, but to newspapers and general publishers. Beginning in 1927, he started to write and deliver the radio broadcasts collected in Radio Benjamin, many of which were aimed at children. The transformation is extraordinary. Suddenly, his writing becomes engaging, vivid and, above all, understandable. One can’t help feeling the best thing that ever happened to the man was his failure to land a lectureship.

He also began to develop a literary form all his own – the Denkbild, the “figure of thought”. This is a form of writing that replaces discursive argumentation with short observations and reflections, producing something like the “album of sketches” described by Wittgenstein. It is no surprise to discover that Benjamin had a special fondness for, and proficiency in, writing picture postcards. “Don’t take offence [at being sent a mere postcard rather than a letter],” he wrote to one correspondent, “my speciality is precisely such antiquarian postcards.” A selection of these is vividly reproduced in Walter Benjamin’s Archive.

It was in 1924 that Benjamin met Bertolt Brecht, who became one of his closest friends and one of the most important influences on his thinking. It is customary to describe Benjamin as a Marxist, yet it is difficult to discern in his writing much influence of, or even interest in, Marx’s works. What Marxism there is in his thinking seems to have come mainly through the filter of Brecht. That ever-perceptive observer, Arendt, remarks: “Benjamin probably was the most peculiar Marxist ever produced by this movement, which God knows has had its full share of oddities.”

In the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, Benjamin produced a rich variety of articles and books. One notable feature of his work from this period is its engagement with the intellectual and cultural currents of his time in a dazzling range of disciplines. Of lasting significance is his 1931 essay “A Little History of Photography”, in which he provides a subtle and technically informed discussion of what makes early photographs so alluring. It is, to my mind, much better than the better-known essay from 1936, reproduced in Illuminations, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”. The latter was written for the Zeitschrift für ­Sozialforschung, the house journal of the Institute for Social Research, and in it one can sense him straining to write something that fitted into the critical theory espoused by the Frankfurt School.

Hitler’s assumption of power in 1933 made it impossible for Benjamin to continue living in Germany and from then until his death in 1940 he was an itinerant scholar and journalist. He lived in Ibiza, the Riviera, Denmark and (mostly) Paris. He continued to write essays, books and scripts for radio, but getting paid was increasingly a problem and for much of this time he was desperately poor. He received much-needed support from the Institute for Social Research, led by Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, but seemed often to feel that the price demanded for such support – allegiance to their particular brand of dialectical Marxism – was too high. Nevertheless, in 1940, as it became impossible for him to continue to live and work in Nazi-dominated Europe, his only hope of escape seemed to lie in the visa that Horkheimer (who had relocated his institute from Frankfurt to New York) had secured for him to enter the US.

Unenthusiastically, Benjamin – nearly 48 but looking very much older – accepted he would have to leave Europe, and in May he decided to make his way from Paris to the south of France and on to Lisbon, from where he could sail to the States. Over the French border, however, Spanish officials refused to allow him and his travelling companions to transit through the country. Benjamin had prepared himself for this eventuality. Throughout his life, he had struggled with depression and had often talked about committing suicide. Among the few possessions he had packed for the anticipated trip to the US were 15 tablets of morphine – “enough to kill a horse”, as he remarked to Arthur Koestler before he set off.

In the early hours of 27 September 1940, he used that morphine to take his own life. He left a note that read: “In a situation presenting no way out, I have no choice but to make an end of it. It is in a small village in the Pyrenees, where no one knows me, that my life will come to a close.” The next day, the border was reopened.

Ray Monk is a professor of philosophy at the University of Southampton. His books include “Ludwig Wittgenstein: the Duty of Genius” (Vintage)

Walter Benjamin: a Critical Life by Howard Eiland and Michael W Jennings is published by Harvard University Press (768pp, £25). Walter Benjamin’s Archive: Images, Texts, Signs edited by Ursula Marx, Gudrun Schwarz, Michael Schwarz and Erdmut Wizisla and translated by Esther Leslie is published by Verso (288pp, £12.99). Illuminations by Walter Benjamin, edited by Hannah Arendt, is published by The Bodley Head (272pp, £16.99). Radio Benjamin by Walter Benjamin is edited by Lecia Rosenthal, translated by Jonathan Lutes, Lisa Harries Schumann and Diana Reese and published by Verso (320pp, £20).

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Foreign Office cleaners facing the sack after asking for a pay rise

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Cleaners at the Foreign Office are facing disciplinary action after writing a letter to the Foreign Secretary, Phillip Hammnd, asking for a payrise. 

The Foreign Secretary, Philip Hammond, is under pressure to intervene in the case of 14 cleaners at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, after Interserve, the FCO's cleaning company, initiated disciplinary measures against them after they wrote a letter to the Foreign Secretary asking for a raise. 

At present, Interserve's cleaners are paid £7.00 an hour, well short of the £9.15 that the Living Wage Foundation calculates is necessary to survive in London. Writing letters to senior figures is a common tactic deployed by the Living Wage Campaign. 

Interserve insist that while the 14 cleaners have been disciplined as a result of "bringing the contract into disrepute", three of the cleaners are facing redundancy for unrelated reasons. However, Katy Rojas, one of the cleaners affected, told the Guardian that she had a spotless record with Interserve, saying that Hammond was now "the only one who can stop this". "It is not a crime to ask for better wages for me and my workmates."

Photo: Getty Images

Pat Barker’s Noonday shows the full scale of the Blitz

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A novel of sure-footed storytelling and some fine descriptive writing, Noonday reveals the impact of war through a kaleidoscope.

The Blitz is both catalyst and metaphor in Pat Barker’s new novel, Noonday, the third and final instalment of her account of the overlapping lives of the former Slade School art students Elinor Brooke, Paul Tarrant and Kit Neville. In the autumn of 1940, frequent air raids liberate Barker’s characters from ordinary assumptions and shibboleths; their aftermath reflects the slide into lawlessness that such liberation threatens. Collapsing buildings, streets roped off and impassable, pigeons with their wings on fire, the blindness imposed by the blackout, smoke and clouds of plaster dust all coalesce into powerful signifiers of a world imploding. “Incendiaries were drifting down like huge yellow peonies,” we read. The mindless destruction of the capital is simultaneously apocalyptic and beautiful, inhibiting and rich with opportunity. Ideas, emotions and attitudes prove as fragile – and as flammable – as the physical landscape.

Noonday begins two decades after its predecessors, Life Class and Toby’s Room. Elinor and Paul are married but childless, Paul continues to paint and Kit has mostly given up painting for reviewing. None is wholly happy. The fissures in their lives lurk close below the surface. The beginning of the Blitz – with Paul’s work as an air-raid warden and Kit’s and Elinor’s as ambulance drivers, based by chance at the same Tottenham Court Road depot – exposes those fissures. “Nothing quite like the proximity of death to make you feel entitled to grab anything that’s going,” Barker suggests, offering all three a potential mission statement. Only Elinor resists exploiting the lawlessness of wartime London for ­self-gratification; she alone finds self-fulfilment.

Barker’s reputation rests mostly on her Regeneration trilogy, set during the First World War. In Noonday, it is Paul who invokes the memory of the previous conflict. His comparisons of trench life and Blitz London underline the pointlessness of both and the cruelty of civilian warfare. For Paul, pain, bombs and flares made sense in no-man’s-land, “more sense than lying squashed like a cockroach on the floor of a basement kitchen” over 20 years later. As in her earlier trilogy, Barker’s interest is in exploring the impact on individual lives of such arbitrary suffering.

The novel is predominantly a ­third-person narrative, with extracts from Elinor’s diary. That she alone should be accorded her own voice in the novel fits Barker’s purpose. In a passage that suggests diaries written by members of the Bloomsbury group, Elinor writes: “I’m a pinprick, a speck, a bee floating and drowning on a pool of black water, surrounded by ever-expanding, concentric rings of silence. I rub my wings together, or do whatever it is that bees do that makes a noise, but there’s no buzzing.”

Bombs destroy Elinor’s and Paul’s married home and also Kit’s. It is Elinor who successfully makes a new home for herself and finds a way forward as one of Kenneth Clark’s war artists. Independent, reinvigorated in her love of painting, Elinor rediscovers how to buzz again. Or nearly, as Barker is not a trite writer and resists fobbing us off with neat resolutions.

Readers of Life Class and Toby’s Room are unlikely to be surprised by the emotional contortions of Noonday. In essence, the novel’s plot is a simple one that is best not spoiled by the reviewer. Instead, Barker exploits the opportunities posed by the Blitz and its mostly nocturnal world of terror, chaos and exhaustion to offer the reader kaleidoscopic snapshots of a society close
to the edge. The shifting fortunes of – among others – a cockney evacuee, a chippy cab driver, the heavily bejewelled widow of a colonial administrator and a down-at-heel medium called Bertha Mason (a desperate, latter-day Mrs Gamp) illustrate the scale of the Blitz’s social impact; they are boldly coloured controlled experiments against which to measure the behaviour of the novel’s main characters. Paul suffers from recurrent bouts of vertigo. In one way or another, all of the novel’s characters experience similar disorientation.

Noonday is a more successful novel than Toby’s Room. Elinor emerges more fully: her plight is more acute and more involving. Doughtiness, opportunism, fear and a frenetic amorality characterise Barker’s version of the Blitz mentality: it is left to the reader to unravel who, in this maelstrom, retains our sympathy. This is a novel of sure-footed storytelling and some fine descriptive writing. It does not necessarily expand our understanding of the world it depicts but it focuses our thoughts and consistently engages the imagination.

Noonday by Pat Barker is published by Hamish Hamilton (272pp, £18.99)

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Not just sourdough: the feminist artisan bakery run by women who are ex-offenders

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The Good Loaf is a haven for women who have been in prison, on probation or in long-term unemployment – it even has a resident domestic abuse support worker.

Nestled between BBC Northampton and a quadruple-fronted Jobcentre sits the Northampton Boot and Shoe Quarter. Surrounded by neatly stacked rows of red-bricked terraces and boarded up shoe factories, it’s hard to imagine that trade was once booming here.

Wandering past the graffiti-smothered shop windows, I approach my destination. Once home to an RAF boots factory, the building has been turned into an artisan bakery and café. But unlike most fiver-a-sourdough-loaf establishments, The Good Loaf is staffed by female ex-offenders.

All photos: The Good Loaf

Inside I am greeted with row upon row of cake and loaf upon loaf of bread. Behind the counter, women busy themselves with raucous coffee machines and chattering customers. On the surface, it looks no different from any other café. And apart from the odd prison tattoo on show, it isn’t. “It’s just a normal place,” explains Mike Crisp, the Bakery’s operations manager. “Often it’s only afterwards that people realise they’ve been served by an ex-prisoner”.

Having been a baker for nearly 30 years, Crisp starts work at four in the morning and oversees the day-to-day running of the kitchen. “The volunteers have to be able to put up with banter from the baker. It’s a real life working situation,” explains Crisp. “Some of the women have never had men around them that don’t want to take something from them”.

Since opening last July, The Good Loaf has helped improve the lives of local women who have either been in prison, on probation or in long-term unemployment. In helping women who have come into contact with the criminal justice system, it has not only increased the employability of female offenders but helped break cycles of offending and removed the stigma that ex-offenders face.

Julie*, 44, has been involved since January. “I started as a volunteer but now I’m full-time paid staff. I love coming here. I bake all the cakes; everything from coffee cake to carrot cake to brownies. More recently I’ve been experimenting with Rolo and Reese’s cakes,” she says.

Charged for assaulting a police officer, Julie was put on probation for 12 months instead of receiving a prison sentence. “It was a stupid drunken mistake and I haven’t drunk anything since,” she tells me. “I’m now working as a team leader in the kitchen. This is the first job I’ve ever worked. Before this, I was a carer for my disabled child. I’m really enjoying having a routine and interacting with the other staff and customers.”

Unlike Julie, her fellow volunteer Hannah* hasn’t had a run-in with the law. “I’m recovering from alcoholism. If it wasn’t for the church and my friends, I probably wouldn’t be here now,” she reflects. “I haven’t had a paid job for two years so coming here has really helped me. It gives you a purpose – something to stay on the straight and narrow for. If you’ve got to go to work in the morning, you’re not going to stay out the whole night before.”

Julie and Hannah are not alone. The Good Loaf supports up to 100 women each year. As well as offering employment and training opportunities in a real working environment, it directly feeds its volunteers into other jobs in Northampton. “Businesses in the local community have been very supportive. Obviously it can be a risk taking on an ex-offender, so we feel that we need to lead by example,” explains The Good Loaf’s CEO, Suzy Van Rooyen.

Without places like The Good Loaf, local businesses would continue to cast off applicants with a criminal record in a discarded pile. After all, the employment prospects for women leaving prison are gloomy. A mere 8 per cent of women are likely to have positive employment outcomes when released, compared with 27 per cent of men.

Taking many of its volunteers from Peterborough Prison, The Good Loaf takes a holistic approach. As well as providing employment opportunities, it also has a domestic abuse practitioner and mental health worker on site. “We support them with all of their different needs. It’s amazing to hear some of the women say ‘this is the first time I’ve done something for myself’,” Rooyen says. “Positive feedback from the customers definitely helps build confidence too.”

It’s worth noting that 80 per cent of women who enter prison under sentence have committed a non-violent offence. In other words, the majority of female offenders serve short sentences for low-level petty crimes like shoplifting. But these short sentences are not to be underestimated – not only does prison disrupt maternal bonds (two-thirds of female prisoners have a child under five) irreparably; it later leaves women with the practical problem and social stigma of a criminal record.

Moreover, female prisoners are a deeply troubled demographic. According to stats from the Prison Reform Trust, not only have half of women in prison experienced domestic violence, 53 per cent suffered abuse while they were children. On top of this, mental health problems are also prevalent. To put this into context, almost a third of female inmates had a psychiatric admission prior to entering prison.

This is why places like The Good Loaf are so important. In helping women integrate into what is often a hostile and unforgiving society, The Good Loaf helps to break cycles of crime, violence and hopelessness.

*The names of Julie and Hannah have been changed to protect their identity.

The Good Loaf

The In-Out referendum will be closer than you think

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In 1975, Harold Wilson faced a supportive media and a Europe on the up. David Cameron's challenge is far greater. 

As we survey the aftermath of Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Labour leader, an outcome bookies would have offered 100 to one on just a few months ago, it’s worth considering the mere two to one shot from Ladbrokes that Britain votes to leave the EU before the end of 2017.

The last vote on the issue was in 1975. Several commentators have pointed out the parallels between that referendum and today’s, but more important than what is similar is what is completely different. There have been four key areas of change, all of which, in my view, have increased the chances of Brexit.

The first is the change to the European Union itself. In the last forty years there have been five major treaty amendments, two name changes and 19 new members. The introduction of free ,ovement, the formation of the Eurozone, the trauma of Maastricht and the ignominious exit from the ERM have all occurred in the intervening period. Now, new voting rules have raised the prospect of a “tyranny of the qualified majority”, in which the EU is gerrymandered to the interests of the Eurozone while Britain’s agenda is side-lined. What in 1975 was presented as a trade bloc stands today as an increasingly integrated political project, to the dismay of many voters.

The second change is the link between immigration and EU membership. This is encapsulated in the first point, but took on a life of its own following the eastward expansion of the EU in 2004. Today immigration leads voters’ list of concerns, ahead of the economy and the NHS, with 45 per cent naming it among the “important issues facing Britain”. The current refugee and border control crisis looks likely to reinforce existing concerns. And whilst not all Eurosceptics are opposed to immigration (Douglas Carswell springs to mind) it is likely that the ability to “regain control of Britain’s borders” will form a key plank of the Leave campaign.

Of course, even in the event of Brexit it is questionable whether Britain could place strict limits on EU migration without risking its access to EU markets - Non-EU member Switzerland has been faced with just such a dilemma. But whether such nuances will cut through in the campaign is another matter. Much will depend on the press, which brings us to the third change. The British press is far more Eurosceptic now than it was in 1975.

It seems strange to imagine the Express or Mail exhorting their readers to vote in favour of EU membership, but at the last referendum, all national newspapers, with the exception of the Communist-supporting Morning Star, joined the pro-European consensus. Today of course, things look very different. The Express and Star newspapers will almost certainly campaign to leave. The Mail, Telegraph and Rupert Murdoch’s Sun, Britain’s most popular paper, could potentially join them. In an era of declining readerships and online news outlets the positions of the press may seem less important. But most online traffic still goes to the major newspapers and UK impartiality rules allow newspapers to punch above their weight, as the positions they take become news fodder for the broadcasters.

The fourth change is the relative health of the UK economy. The 1975 referendum took place against the backdrop of the UK’s second consecutive year of recession. British commentators looked enviously across the Channel, one Times editorial reading “How much better off Britain would be if we had followed the same disciplines on inflation as Germany throughout, or more recently France”. The sense that, in Europe, Britain had found a potential solution to its endemic structural problems was pervasive. Now, as much of Europe lies in stagnant repose, punctuated by the occasional political convulsion, UK growth chugs along at an annual rate of 2.8 per cent. The risk of “going it alone”, if you believe it exists, is not the looming shadow it was in 1975.

Adding to these factors is the apparently negligible willingness among other EU member states to make concessions to the UK agenda. David Cameron has shelved hopes to win concessions on free movement and looks likely to have to abandon plans to limit in-work benefits for foreign EU nationals too. As a negotiating strategy it might be summed up in a phrase familiar to early users of Facebook: taking what we can get. Wilson’s negotiations achieved little as well of course, but in the absence of press criticism, (a typical Times headline reading simply, “Wilson lists his achievements”), they were presented to the public as an unqualified triumph. It was left to historians to provide a withering verdict: “an enormously hollow exercise in political spin” in the words of Dominic Sandbrook. David Cameron is unlikely to have to wait for the verdict of history for similar criticism.

The government may yet eke out a close victory, particularly if it can leverage its “status quo” advantage. But there is a clear risk that a narrow victory, based on the fear of change rather than a compelling positive case, neither silences the Eurosceptics nor settles the issue for the wider public.

Photo: Getty Images

PewDiePie: the rise of YouTube’s biggest star

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10 billion views, 40 million subscribers and 15 minutes of video per day – how an unknown 25-year-old Swede conquered the internet.

I can still remember the first time I sat down and typed "youtube.com" into my web browser. It was during the Easter break before my GCSEs and there was only so much about magnetism and circuitry I could read for my upcoming Physics exam. The video that caught my attention was a Star Wars parody, which had nothing to do with Star Wars. It was a series about "Chad Vader", a Darth Vader-like character in the role of a grocery store shift manager who weirded out his colleagues.

It dawned on me just how amazing this “Web 2.0” version of the internet could be, where faster broadband speeds were helping to deliver high-quality videos and music. The internet became a stable source of entertainment while I was growing up and struggling to hold onto my love of Pokémon. (Don’t worry, this love has survived and is still going strong. Guys, we need to catch ‘em all!)

Since then, many internet stars have come and gone, but one has continued to grow in size like nobody else. Felix Kjellberg, more commonly known by his internet moniker PewDiePie, is a 25-year-old Swede who has remained YouTube’s biggest star since 2013, accumulating just under 40m followers on his channel. What’s fascinating about his staggering popularity is that his videos have been watched over 10bn times, but he's still relatively unknown to most of the public.

PewDiePie, or simply Pewds, is part of the “Let’s Play” phenomenon, where gamers upload videos of themselves commentating and reacting to computer games as they play them.

I know what you’re thinking. At first I was sceptical about this vast genre but now that I’ve spent time watching some of these videos, I’m baffled by those who don’t understand it, or people who scorn when they learn others do this as a profession. After all, an awful lot of people enjoy watching and listening to men kick a ball around on a Saturday afternoon. Isn’t this just the digital equivalent?

His popularity stems from the unique style of his videos. They usually start off with a high-pitched, signature declaration of his name before descending into sarcastic, over-the-top reactions to gaming fails, such as trying to get a slice of toast across a room, before ending and thanking his “bros” for tuning in.

Despite his antics, the main reason he’s so popular is simply how good he is. Anyone who’s played a computer game can understand the frustrations when the story progresses and you reach an immensely difficult part, or the rush of dopamine when you suddenly overcome it. Pewds is able to personify these emotions into a wacky 15-20 minute serving for us to absorb each day, especially if we don’t have time to play the games.

However, the opportunities to play games is growing. The gaming industry has exploded in the past 15 years, having long overtaken both the film and music sectors. There is also a huge range of games available, not something you can say about the never-ending stream of superhero junk served by Hollywood. The quality is also becoming breathtaking and ambitious, especially from small, independent companies, with games such as Journey, Limbo, and the dizzying MirrorMoon. These types of small indie titles are what make up the majority of his videos.

And let’s not ignore the ubiquity of smartphones and tablets which have flooded screens with games, wherever you find yourself in the world. I’m always comforted during a delay on the Tube by being able to control a deranged, digital goat on my phone.

Although many of us play games silently as if we’ve lost the ability to express emotions, Pewds does it in the completely opposite way. "They feel a connection to the one they’re watching. It’s almost like you’re hanging out," said Felix in an interview with Variety earlier this year. But it's something more fundamental than that; he connects with his audience very genuinely.

Just watch him talk about reports of his earnings or that his recent travels have left him tired after months of planning and working, which is unsurprising given the amount of work required to make these short bouts of adrenaline-packed videos.

To make one, he has to set up the game, adjust the camera, microphone and lighting, record a good chunk of gameplay, edit out most of what was recorded, add hilarious effects (think PowerPoint animations on steroids), create a YouTube thumbnail in Photoshop, and then the final upload. Pewds continues to control all of his output, taking very few sponsorships, and gets any assistance he needs through Maker Studios, a Disney subsidiary which helps internet stars with production. Within 18-24 hours, 1-2m enthusiastic fans will have already clicked on his newest video.

But don't let his public antics fool you. Felix has stayed away from much of the media spotlight outside his own channel, choosing instead to live in Brighton with his partner Marzia Bisognin, who is also a successful YouTube personality going by the name CutiePieMarzia. Whereas Felix's videos are fizzling with energy, Marzia's are much more subdued, focusing on fashion, travel and general day-to-day vlogging. Let's hope their relationship lasts, at least to save on any public displays of awkwardness.

What's next for Pewds? He's keeping busy with a new book and a game, and gave a rare interview to Stephen Colbert while filming a secret project in the US.

I was able to see Pewds recently, after queuing for many hours for a selfie, and collected a signed copy of his book, This Book Loves You. Before arriving, I didn't know what to expect in terms of the number of people there or their demographic, but any preconceptions I had were immediately undone. There were teen fangirls, young kids accompanied by their parents, people in their early twenties (like myself), people in their early forties, and ethnic diversity as well. And did I mention the teen fangirls? His influence is clearly much wider than any YouTube stats report can possibly produce, and after four hours in Piccadilly Circus, there wasn't any sign of the queues dying down.

Worth the wait.

Pewds won't be giving hints about his future ambitions any time soon. Think of him as this generation's Björn Borg, the legendary tennis player who was known for staying calm and reserved during his matches – except Pewds swaps a racket for an Xbox controller.

What is clear is that the internet is constantly changing the media landscape, even with everyday services like YouTube now firmly in the mainstream. Other YouTube stars have successfully transitioned into radio, made films or (also) released books, trying to appeal to new audiences. However, the unique connection YouTube stars have with their fans is in their ability to make videos catering to them directly. And Pewds, who has the biggest following of the lot, is showing no signs of stopping serving his tens of millions of loyal followers.

YouTube: PewDiePie

How can the Green Party succeed in the age of Jeremy Corbyn?

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The party’s anti-austerity, anti-establishment message has been superseded by the new Labour leader.

Last month, the Green Party met for its annual conference. The mood was, by turns, upbeat and uncertain. The last 12 months, it’s true, had been exhilarating: at the beginning of 2014, the party had 15,000 members; by May 2015 the figure was around 60,000 (surpassing both Ukip and the Lib Dems) and had continued to rise even after an election result which saw the party win only one seat: its existing one, held by Caroline Lucas in Brighton. But by the end of the summer, British politics – these days so tempestuous, so hard to predict – had changed once more: Jeremy Corbyn had been elected leader of the Labour Party, in a tidal wave of popular enthusiasm that made the “Green surge” of the preceding months look anaemic by comparison. Thoughtful Greens present at the conference sensed confusion in the air. “Corbyn’s victory raised a lot of questions for people,” said one. “And I don’t think it was properly dealt with.”

The Greens do have a problem. But it’s not immediately discernible, at least at first glance. The party’s 2015 manifesto – with its opposition to austerity, promises to scrap university tuition fees and commitment to renationalising the railways – was virtually indistinguishable from the platform that won Corbyn the Labour leadership. In this sense, the Greens have achieved a quiet victory over the past few months, as the policies they’ve advocated make their way into the script of the country’s main opposition party. “Everyone’s just really excited about what’s happening in politics at the moment,” says Caroline Russell, a Green councillor who stood against Corbyn in Islington North during the general election. “It feels like anything’s possible.”

But there’s another, less sanguine, way of reading this. Organisationally, the party is vulnerable. One of the interesting things in British politics over the last few years has been the skittishness of the “anti-establishment” vote. The Greens, having benefitted from the collapse of the Lib Dems since 2010, lack both the culture and party structures required to retain the loyalty of their new recruits, many of whom – generally young, educated and middle-class – disdain tribalism in politics as a matter of high principle. Since the summer, the party has lost around 2,000 members. As the Labour party transforms itself from a party of government into a party of protest, there’s little reason to suppose that the Greens can maintain their momentum, or, indeed, their USP, when faced with the energy and comparative might of the Corbynite machine.

For some Greens, this isn’t a problem. “Greens are pluralists, and if our policies are being adopted by a major party, that’s excellent,” says Josiah Mortimer, a member who switched from Labour to the Greens prior to the 2015 election. Caroline Russell agrees: “Tribal politics, where it’s just about pushing your party forward, is not that appealing to many people, and particularly the types of people that join the Green party.” The kernel of the argument seems to be that the Green Party is different from other parties because it lacks a self-aggrandising corporate identity: it’s more of a pressure group, happy to influence from the sidelines, willing to take an electoral hit in order to keep focus on the issues they care about.  

But the thing is, as Ben Jackson wrote in the London Review of Booksin March, the Greens in recent years stopped behaving like the “anti-party party” they’ve traditionally aspired to be. “If there’s one thing the Greens are trying to be during this election campaign, it’s a party party,” he wrote. And that’s the point: under Natalie Bennett’s leadership, the Greens definitively moved away from their central premise – environmentalism – and became another “party of the left”, talking about exactly the same things – anti-austerity, welfarism, nationalization, trade unionism – that have always preoccupied old Labour.

The logic was sensible enough: in a first-past-the-post system, single-issue parties inevitably get clobbered, so to achieve anything the party needed to shed its image as a middle-class hippy sect and build up a broad-based coalition. There was a precedent, after all: the SNP had managed to achieve just this, on a monumental scale, in Scotland, having transformed itself from a narrowly nationalist party into a broad-church social democratic one. But now, for the Greens, this logic is starting to fray. The coalition, if they want it, is there: Corbyn’s building it, and he even has enough environmental credentials to satisfy soft Greens. Without a distinctive pitch the risk for the Greens is less that they lose votes – it’s hard to imagine, at least in 2020, the party winning seats beyond its Brighton stronghold, so in that respect there’s little to lose anyway – but that their take on the issues they really care about – namely, the environment – doesn’t get heard. They risk becoming a green-tinged wing of Corbyn’s Labour, all but swallowed up by his left coalition, indistinguishable except insofar as they talk a little bit more, or a little bit more loudly, about the environment.

One answer, perhaps, is for the Greens to start talking again about the single thing that really does make them radically distinct from all other parties, including Corbyn’s Labour: their critical, almost Malthusian, attitude to economic growth. This means breaking away from trade unionism, opposing ever-increasing consumption, and basically rejecting the idea of technological, and economic, progress. In policy terms, it means shouting about Citizen’s Income, which might make some people worse off, but would represent a radical redrawing of the relationship between work and the physical environment, allowing people to both work and consume less. It’s categorically not at one with the way Corbyn’s Labour thinks about the world (he and his shadow Chancellor stress the importance of “growing the economy” to deal with the deficit), and is still further at odds with the Conservatives or the Lib Dems. But it is very much distinct.

It isn’t, however, a promising electoral proposition: it’s hard to imagine many people, not least among the working classes, accepting that they should take a hit to their living standards. Most Greens are aware of this, and tend to shy away from talking about it in unambiguous language, referring instead to “sustainable growth”, or “greener growth”. But it remains this, far more than anything else, that marks them out from other parties: it’s always been their animating purpose, even if it’s been somewhat obscured in recent years.

The party, therefore, is stuck between a rock and a hard place: caught between becoming merely a minority wing of the Labour Party coalition, overlooked and under-heard, or hunkering down as an emphatically Green Party with a radical, ideological distinctiveness but isolated and outside the mainstream. There’s no easy answer.

In a short film made by the Guardian’s John Harris, a Green candidate in Bristol prior to the general election speaks passionately about the role of his party in the future of British politics. “We need to help voters understand that we need to be a completely different world,” he says to Harris, who appears sympathetic, if a little sceptical. The problem for the Greens is that in the Age of Corbyn voters might not listen. And if they do, they might not like what they hear.

Christopher Furlong/Getty

It's well-past time for the government to take action on bad landlords

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The private rented sector needs more and better regulation - soon. 

Britain has some of the poorest protection for private tenants of any western economy. While British tenants have to settle for short-term tenancies, unpredictable rent hikes and a regulatory system that allows landlords to evict tenants for no reason, our European counterparts often enjoy indefinite tenancies, regulated rent rises and real powers to take on landlords if the boiler breaks.

I’m regularly contacted by tenants who have been evicted for no reason, or who fear the consequences of asking for basic repairs to be carried out. A small but welcome recent change in legislation now means that tenants cannot be evicted for no reason if they’ve registered a complaint with a landlord. However, given the severe imbalance of power between landlords and tenants it remains to be seen how effective this will be.

Last week, Karen Buck MP’s private members’ bill which would make it unlawful for a landlord to let out a property that is not fit for human habitation, was “talked out” by Conservative MPs, meaning it couldn’t be voted on. That this is not already unlawful is extraordinary – action is long overdue.

While most landlords are good landlords, poor behaviour is commonplace and astonishingly often perfectly legal. This should be considered unacceptable, particularly given that the number of families living in the sector has grown dramatically in recent years and is forecast to keep doing so. It’s a situation that our European neighbours do not tend to tolerate.

Yet any suggestion of tightening protections for British tenants is met by hectoring from landlord representatives and politicians alike, with references to statist “Venezuelan-style rent control” abounding. When even modest proposals by European standards, were announced by the Opposition in 2014, Grant Shapps claimed that “evidence from Britain and around the world conclusively demonstrates that rent controls lead to poorer quality accommodation, fewer homes being rented and ultimately higher rents – hurting those most in need.”

Reminiscent of businesses’ response to the introduction of the minimum wage, landlords have promised that any increase in rent or tenancy security for tenants will produce a mass exodus from the rental market.

The problem is that this position doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.

Last week the London Assembly’s Housing Committee examined a report we commissioned from the Cambridge Centre for Housing and Planning Research. The report blows the myth about rent regulation wide open.

The research forecasted the likely growth of London’s private rented sector over the next decade and then modelled the likely impact that six different rent control models would have on this growth. The sector is expected to grow by 49 per cent over the next decade, but with all but the most draconian rent regulation, the sector would still be expected to grow by between 35 per cent and 49 per cent over the next decade.

It’s also important to note that the recent growth of London’s private rented sector has generally come at the expense of other tenures – particularly homeownership – and not by the expansion of overall housing supply.

For London, rent regulation would therefore mean that the number of privately rented homes still increases rapidly over the next decade, but tenants would have much greater predictability over rents and tenancy conditions, while more homes would also become available for first-time buyers. By dampening rent inflation, it would also help to reduce the Housing Benefit bill in a more humane way than the Government is currently seeking to do.

Britain has some of the weakest protections for tenants, but it also has a private rented sector that is remarkably insignificant in size compared to some of our neighbours. Even in London, where the sector now accounts for 26 per cent of the housing stock, it is dwarfed by the size of the sector in countries like Germany and Switzerland, where it is 60 per cent and 56 per cent of the total stock respectively. In both of these countries rents are regulated, tenancies tend to be indefinite and landlords can usually only evict tenants if they want to live in or sell the property.

The notion that London can’t, and shouldn’t, do anything to give private tenants greater security over rent and tenancy conditions is nonsense. With the sector forecast to grow to almost half of all homes in London by 2025, the case for action only keeps building.

Photo: Getty Images/Christopher Furlong

Indie music’s women problem and retrospective sexism

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I enjoyed the BBC's documentary tracing the story of indie music. But where are all the women?

I really enjoyed the first and second episodes of Music For Misfits, a recent BBC documentary tracing the story of indie music. It started with the labels and the cities and scenes they sprang from, Postcard Records in Glasgow, Two Tone in Coventry. In doing this it took “indie” in the sense of independence rather than music style, which complicates the image of indie as white boys with guitars. But something went wrong with the third episode as the story moved into the nineties. While cheering and pointing as friends and people I knew flashed up on the screen, (Bob and Pete from St Etienne looking like babies, ah!), I started to realise that women were almost entirely absent. The only woman talking on screen for the first 55 minutes of the hour-long show was journalist Sian Pattenden. One lone woman’s voice among countless men covering nearly 25 years of indie music history.

It wasn’t just the lack of voices but the choice of stories that were included. No mention was made of the Riot Grrrl movement. Including the story of Riot Grrrl would have easily linked up with the previous programme’s section on fanzines and C86. Riot Grrrl also complicates the idea that British indie was in a stand off with US music. Rather in this scene bodies, music and fanzines travelled across the Atlantic and influenced each other. Also, while in indie music “white is the norm” as Sarah Sahim recently argued, the Riot Grrrl moment in the UK also included bands lead by people of colour such as The Voodoo Queens and Cornershop (who had a number one on the independent Wiija in 1997).

Some major players were also missing. You have to go some lengths to tell the story of Britpop and not mention Elastica, but that’s what happened in the programme. There was a very short clip of them that flashed by. Or Sleeper. They were huge. Or PJ Harvey. Or Lush. Or Echobelly. Or Shampoo.

While Britpop turned into a boring blokefest, what writer Rhian E Jones calls a cultural Clampdown, there were other stories and currents in indie. Lad rock may have won out but it was depressing to see the erasure of women’s voices and stories in this programme.

As a young woman in a band I was patronised by sound men, literally kicked by roadies who saw us sitting down in a corridor and assumed we were groupies when we were locked out of our dressing room at Brixton Academy (The Ramones’ roadies. Joey Ramone came and apologised afterwards. He was a sweetheart). I was laughed at for being ugly in the music press. The NME said they would put our band, Kenickie, (three eighteen-year-old women and one guy) on the cover if we got naked and painted ourselves gold (“in a ‘homage’ to The Slits and Manic Street Preachers”). We declined and they didn’t put us on the cover that week. My band was famous for between song chat and response to the audience (mainly from Lauren and Marie who remain two of the funniest cleverest people I have ever met). But this stage act was honed partly in response to getting shouted out to ‘get our tits out’ at gigs. Great things happened too and being in this band changed my life forever. But sexism was everyday and in your face.

I am chronicling these instances because it occurred to me after watching this documentary that as a woman in music you get the day to day sexism at the time and then afterwards you get the retrospective sexism as your stories get cut out. This isn’t about my particular band not being included - we were a very small piece of all of this. But I know women were there because I was there and I saw it and their stories matter too.

Emma Jackson is a sociology lecturer at Goldsmiths, and was the bassist in pop-punk 90s band Kenickie. This article was originally published on her blog, emmakjackson.com.

Should we treat mental illness the same as physical illness?

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I have grown uneasy with the pressure to validate mental illness by analogy with the physical.

The start of 1995 would have been the worst time in my life, if only I could have mustered up the will to care. Aged 19, severely relapsed into anorexia and depression, I spent most of January and February holed up in a college room, avoiding food, swigging vodka in in the dark while listening to The Smiths. I am nothing if not a dedicated follower of cliché.

My favourite album was Hatful of Hollow, my favourite track, “Still Ill”. I’d rewind the cassette again and again just to listen to that one song.

“Does the body rule the mind or does the mind rule the body?

I dunno.”

Tracing the contours of my bones through paper-thin skin, I considered these lines very deep and meaningful. Meaningful of what, I couldn’t say, but meaningful all the same.

Over twenty years later, I am unfussed over whether my anorexia was a disease of the mind or the body. I consider it both and neither. Certainly, I no longer feel guilt over “choosing” such a destructive path. It was a thousand things at once: an addiction to hunger, flight from puberty, the embrace of a puritan aesthetic in defiance of a world I couldn’t control. Bundle them up together and give it a name: Anorexia. Ana. Call it whatever you want.

In therapy we were encouraged to think of anorexia as a hostile being controlling us, almost akin to demonic possession. Don’t listen to the voice telling you not to eat. Cast it out. I never really bought into this. Mere metaphor would not save me. That said, I’ve no idea what helped me to survive when others didn’t. More often than not, I consider it to have been my inner greedy pig (but then again, that’s just the kind of thing “the voice” would want you to believe).

Both sufferers of mental illness and those who campaign on their behalf face a dual challenge: living with the illness itself while confronting the stigma that surrounds it. There is enormous pressure to take a simple approach when doing the latter. After all, you are dealing with a confused and frightened public; there’s no point in complicating things further. You are then only left with the choice of which way to jump.

Do you take the line that mental illness patients are “just like us”, symptoms all but invisible? Do you go all-out for a social model which presents the world as mad, the patient as sane? Do you encourage people to think of depression, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder as conditions no different to diabetes, heart disease or a broken arm? It all depends, I think, on what you most want to achieve: to convince people that mental illness is not dangerous or to convince them that it is real.

Earlier this month, over the course of World Mental Health Day, I noticed that the urge to draw comparisons between mental and physical health seemed particularly strong. “You wouldn’t say that to someone with cancer /a headache / a broken leg!” was the order of the day. It’s an incredibly effective tactic, drawing attention to the way in which often, we don’t quite believe that someone with depression, psychosis or an eating disorder isn’t putting it on. Mental illness is hard enough to understand and empathise with; making it akin to physical illness helps to take away the fuzzy edges, where sickness overlaps with “normal” behaviour and helplessness overlaps with choice. Nobody chooses to be mentally ill; nobody chooses not to get well. This is something which cannot be stressed enough. Even so I think that, for me, those fuzzy edges existed and exist today.

During the late Eighties I experienced treatments for anorexia based solely on punitive behaviour modification techniques. Sent to an ordinary children’s ward, I found myself compared unfavourably to the patients around me, those who were “properly” ill. Years later, when I finally came into contact with anorexia sufferers who were sicker than me, I was surprised to find that suddenly I was the one who couldn’t believe that they weren’t putting it on. They frustrated me, the desperately ill ones, with their joke shop skeleton faces and wheedling excuses. It took one of them dying to convince me that they were for real. Meanwhile I choose to get better, or I did get better, or some combination of the two. And afterwards I spent years worrying that if I could get better in 1995, why not in 1994 or 1993 or even earlier? Why get ill at all? If it had been a “proper” illness, why hadn’t it needed a “proper” cause, a “proper” cure? Maybe the nurses on the children’s ward had been right.

I was and remain partly in love with the twisted aesthetics of anorexia, an imaginary version of the disorder that used to call to me when I was sitting in the dark, fingernails blue and joints chafing. It holds the attraction of an identity, fragments of a tragic life story, something which I’ve always felt I lacked. I could tell you “but that is not the illness. The illness is something different. The illness is walking round Sainsbury’s every day, following the same route, picking up the same items, reading the nutrition labels, putting them back, wiping your hands on your skirt, maybe buying some items, storing them under your bed for no reason, repeat and repeat until it gets dark.” I could say it is that and only that. But the illness is everything put together. It doesn’t make it less real.  

I have grown uneasy with the pressure to validate mental illness by analogy with the physical. In a truly compassionate society this would not be necessary. We risk turning suffering into an identity, a foregone conclusion, a test of whether one really, really deserves to get help. We risk asking those suffering to conform to a fantasy version of their disorder, in which happiness is weakness and recovery a sham. I understand why we do it, but we risk making mentally ill people feel they have something to prove. They don’t.

“Does the body rule the mind or does the mind rule the body?”

I am one of those lucky enough to have learned not to care.

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