Home Current IssueFirst Drafts -
Prospect's Blog
Currently Browsing
Contents page Cover story Opinions Web exclusive Essays Debate Symposium Intellectuals Special report Witness Reviews Fiction Columns Crossword (PDF) The List Publication Dates Subscriptions
The Archive
Subjects Authors Issues
Newsletter Sign Up



Learn more about the newsletter
OffWestEnd.com



In Fact: In Britain, of the 200,000 books on sale last year, only 10,000 sold over 3,500 copies. Of the 1.2m titles sold in the US in 2004, only 2 per cent sold more than 5,000 copies. (The Times, 16th February 2008) - Kabul's population has increased from 300,000 in 2001 to 3m today. (Financial Times, 11th February 2008) - Marlboro cigarettes took their name from Great Marlborough Street—the location of the Philip Morris factory that first produced them. (londonist.com, 18th February 2008) - In 2007, total European stock market capitalisation exceeded that of the US for the first time since 1945. (Paul Kennedy lecture, LSE, 6th February 2008) - Harry S Truman had no middle name—his advisers insisted he insert an initial to gain credibility with voters. (BBC Magazine Monitor, 1st February 2008) - Over the past five years, 2.9m rooms have been "lost" in British homes as a result of open-plan conversions. (Daily Mirror, 29th January 2008) - In 40 per cent of weddings in Britain in 2005, at least one person was getting married for at least the second time. (The Observer, 3rd February 2008) - In Britain, between 1991 and 2005, deaths directly attributed to alcohol almost doubled. (British Medical Journal, December 2007) - As poet laureate, Andrew Motion receives "a butt of sack per annum" in payment—110 gallons of Spanish sherry, or about 630 bottles, each year. (Prospect research) - Worldwide, the number of mobile phone users will overtake the number of non-users this year for the first time. In 2000, only 12 per cent of the global population had a mobile phone. (AP, 6th February 2008) - No British university will offer a women's studies undergraduate course from this summer, when the course at London Metropolitan University closes. (Times Higher Education, 31st January 2008) - Amazon.com's number one reviewer, Harriet Klausner, has averaged 45 reviews a week since 2002. (Slate, 22nd January 2008) - The Arts Council typically spends around 90 per cent of its annual music budget on opera. (Prospect research) - In New York city, January 2008 was the first essentially snowless January in the last 75 years. (LiveScience, 30th January 2008) - Nearly 35,000 nurses—enough to staff the entire health service in Wales—have emigrated from Britain in the past four years. (The Times, 28th January 2008) - Cumbria has the lowest number of homicides in England and Wales—none last year compared to 168 in London. (Home Office) - Our eyes are always the same size from birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing. (BBC online) - 47 per cent of British men and 35 per cent of women would give up sex for six months in exchange for a 50-inch plasma HD television. But only 17 per cent of men would stop watching football for the TV. ( The Register, 11th February 2008) - In 2006, Britain spent £497m on cosmetic surgery—more than any other European country. (BBC News Online, 15th February 2008) - Smoking is responsible for 25 per cent of all male deaths in the developed world. (World Health Organisation) - Brazil has more people of African descent than any country outside Africa. (BBC)
Inside the May 2008 issue:
(click cover for full contents)

indicates article is free to view


Christopher Hitchens
Alexander LinklaterFrom '68 agitator to staunch supporter of George W Bush's Iraq war—what explains Hitchens's political journey? I spent three days with him in Washington trying to find out.
PLUS out-takes from the interviews—Hitchens on the sectarian left, his relationship with his brother, and more.

1968: liberty or its illusion?
anthony giddens, joe boyd, roger scruton, jean seaton, dominic sandbrook & othersA special symposium on the legacy of 1968, expanded for our online edition. Many 68ers now feel ambivalent about their heritage. Was too much of value discarded? Were the hippies just carriers of a new strain of capitalism? Prospect writers give their views.

Who are the world's top public intellectuals?
In 2005, Prospect and Foreign Policy asked you to vote for your top global public intellectuals from a longlist of 100. This year we are repeating the exercise, with a new list reflecting the emerging trends in global thought—from US military strategists to Egyptian televangelists.
PLUS commentary from Christopher Hitchens

Is democracy winning?
Robert Kagan vs robert cooper Is the world reverting to a struggle between great powers? Or is the democratising spirit of 1989 still alive?

What I learned in Belfast
Jonathan PowellOf course the Northern Ireland conflict was unique. That doesn't mean it holds no lessons for other trouble spots.

What genes remember
Philip HunterMany geneticists now think that the behaviour of our genes can be altered by experience—and even that these changes can be passed on to future generations. This finding may transform our understanding of inheritance and evolution.

Return of the spoken word
Tom ChatfieldInspired by hip hop and Yeats, a new generation of performers is helping to revitalise poetry.

We are all Kemalists
nicholas birchTurkey's supposedly antagonistic "democratic Islamists" and "authoritarian secularists" are actually cut from the same cloth.

Rehabilitating Carson
john Quiggin and Nicholas LambertWhy do some people continue to hold Rachel Carson responsible for millions of malaria deaths?.
PLUS
a reply from Roger Bate of Africa Fighting Malaria.

Hurdles on J Street
gideon lichfieldAmerica's new liberal Israel lobby could change the middle east debate in Washington. But it faces major obstacles.

Duncan Fallowell interviewed
georgia de chamberetThe novelist, travel writer and Prospect contributor on his writing strategies, how he met Warhol, and why he is the first travel writer who is not a wanker.

The good fight
mary fitzgeraldContrary to received wisdom, the protracted nature of the Democratic campaign is probably good news for the party—whoever wins.



Click here for full contents.







Lufthansa