John Gray

Articles by John Gray

Results 71 to 80 of 98

The laptop fascists

  • 27 May 2002

Do not dismiss Europe's far-right parties as simply reactionary. They are all the more menacing because, like the Nazis before them, they embrace modernity

To remain in splendid isolation. Is Britain's refusal to commit to Europe neurotic or a mark of common sense? John Gray on why Will Hutton is wrong about our place in the world and why there may never be a referendum on the euro

  • 13 May 2002

The World We're In Will Hutton Little, Brown, 320pp, £17.99 ISBN 0316858714

The NS Essay - A target for destructive ferocity

  • 29 April 2002

Joseph Conrad's world, where terrorists plotted to blow up the Royal Observatory, speaks to our own. Look no further for a great contemporary novelist. By John Gray

Back to the future. Aldous Huxley was very much a product of his time: racist, snobbish and superior. But he was also a visionary, a chronicler of our disturbed modernity. By John Gray

  • 08 April 2002

Aldous Huxley: An English Intellectual Nicholas Murray Little, Brown, 496pp, £20 ISBN 0316854921

The New Statesman Essay - The decay of the free market

  • 25 March 2002

The IMF and the World Bank carry on as if nothing had changed, but it is already clear that we have entered a new era of state power

Why terrorism is unbeatable. Revolutionary nihilism of the kind embodied by al-Qaeda is not a throwback to the past but part of what it means to be modern. John Grayreviews the reaction to 11 September and argues that Americans, like the rest of us, must learn to live with such shocks

  • 25 February 2002

Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia Ahmed Rashid Yale University Press, 272pp, £16.95 ISBN 0300093454

Bookmarks

  • 03 December 2001

John Gray on T F Powys

A reputation of merit

  • 15 October 2001

Michael Young: social entrepreneur Asa Briggs Palgrave, 432pp, £52.50 ISBN 0333750233

The era of globalisation is over

  • 24 September 2001

Terror in America: Essay 2 - Communism failed, but market liberalism then tried to impose its own utopia. The atrocities should mark the end of that crusade

When the living is easy

  • 20 August 2001

Summer Special - John Gray follows the Etruscan example and rediscovers the art of living

Fidel Castro

The last revolutionary

The last revolutionary

Steve Richards

On Tory policy

Our future in their hands

Science

Religion and Darwin

Since the dawn  of time

James Macintyre

Miliband's dilemma

Brussels is back with a vengeance

Will Self

On Oscar Wilde

Where the Wilde things are

Film review

Bright Star

Bright Star (PG)

Books

Paul Auster

Invisible

Interview

Alain de Botton

The Books Interview: Alain de Botton

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