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Mike Ticher reviews Hugo Hamilton’s The Speckled People.
Moira Rayner on Janusz Korczak and the early history of children’s rights.
Juliette Hughes looks at the impact of The Passion of the Christ.
Towards the end of a bleak, mid-February Friday, the wind started to groan through the narrow, village streets. Shutters creaked and in the valley below a filmy curtain materialised over the vines and blurred the outlines of the farmhouses.
Margaret Dooley Award Winner, 2005: Sarah Kanowski on doing what needs to be done.
Peter Pierce onThe Autobiography of Wilfred Burchett.
Madeleine Byrne finds Getting Away with Genocide? Elusive Justice and the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, by Tom Fawthrop and Helen Jarvis, vivid and timely.
Italy, Caravaggio and Catholicism.
Dorothy Horsfield visits the fastest growing Jewish community in Europe
Matthew Lamb reviews Kisch in Australia by Heidi Zogbaum.
When February dawned last year, I had been living in a small Provençal village for about a month.
Both the Dresden firestorm and the Holocaust were products of the insidious tendency in wartime for the previously unthinkable to become routine.
85-96 out of 101 results.