Literature offers insights into the rise of extremism / Letters

24 octobre 2025 | Guardian Staff
Readers respond to an article by Charlotte Higgins in which she reflects on Sally Carson’s Crooked Cross and its lessons about fascism Katharine Burdekin’s Swastika Night was first published in 1937 and, like Sally Carson’s Crooked Cross, discussed in Charlotte Higgins’s article, was ahead of (…)
 Site référencé:  The Guardian (Africa)

The Guardian (Africa) 

There must be an Engels (playing with my chart) | Letters
24/10/2025
Timely assurance from Lear’s Kent | Letters
24/10/2025
‘His teeth flew out of his mouth and landed in my spaghetti’ : 10 first date horror stories
24/10/2025
Your Guardian sport weekend : rugby league Ashes, Lionesses v Brazil and F1’s title tussle
24/10/2025
‘Unflappable, witty and super smart’ : the rise and rise of Claudia Winkleman
24/10/2025
Blue Lights is more than great TV. It might be the best chance Britons have of reckoning with the Troubles | Jonathan Freedland
24/10/2025