In a series commissioned by the NS, artists, authors and public figures reflect on their relationship with the capital.
By New Statesman [1] Published 07 August 2012In a series commissioned by the NS, artists, authors and public figures reflect on their relationship with the capital.
Inside the 2012 summer edition of the New Statesman, a special double issue on London, figures from the worlds of pop culture, academia, media and politics offered a "tale" of what the city means to them (and in one case, why they hate it).
Here are the collected capsule essays, from an eclectic mix of the capital's long-term, former and born-and-bred residents.
A life in art galleries [2] - Vivienne Westwood on London’s passion and fury
From hell to hipsville [3] - Bim Adewunmi contemplates Hackney’s inevitable gentrification
The City in the sky [4] - Alex Preston urges bankers to look up at the buildings they built
Dancing beak to beak [5] - Ruth Padel argues that London Zoo is a place of respite and renewal
See, hear, taste, touch [6] - Evgeny Lebedev is grateful to a city that welcomed him
For richer, for poorer [7] - David Lammy questions whether London can be a place for all
Secrets of a river [8] - Matthew Hollis travels on a boat down the mercurial, magical Thames
Thank you for the music [9] - Dorian Lynskey celebrates the Rough Trade record shop
Come one, come all [10] - Sarah Sands insists no other city can compete with the capital
Northern lights [11] - Stuart Maconie is tired of all the fuss devoted to a southern town
Sunday, bloody Sunday [12] - Maurice Glasman recalls gloomy weekends in Palmers Green