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The Weekend Essay

  • Saturday, 3 August, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The worst place I’ve ever stayed

    Bats, giant airborne insects, lethally sharp decor: FT journalists share their hotel nightmares

    A cartoon illustration of a man, woman and two children, one of them bawling, at the door of a room with cracked plaster, mice, spiders and the outline of a fatality victim on the floor
  • Friday, 26 July, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The reset: how Britain can restore its global reputation

    Diplomatic overtures and treaty revisions are not enough, argues Philippe Sands — the country needs a fundamental rethink of its role in the world

    A back view of Starmer and Macron in dark suits. Macron has a hand on Starmer’s shoulder
  • Saturday, 20 July, 2024
    Life & Arts
    What happened to Russia’s seized superyachts?

    Swift action to impound palatial boats became a symbol of western resolve after the invasion of Ukraine. Now the costs are mounting for owners and governments alike

    The prow of a gleaming yacht moored in London’s Canary Wharf with skyscrapers towering over the water
  • Saturday, 13 July, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Paris, the Olympics and the reinvention of a city

    After a divisive election, this summer’s Games will fire the starting gun on a vast project to transform the French capital

    Stands being erected in a square with a  statue of a woman on a winged horse and also at the base of the Eiffel Tower, which bears the symbol of the Olympic rings
  • Thursday, 4 July, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The beautiful game in ugly times — a Euro 2024 journey

    Following the England team in Germany, Gideon Rachman watches new football stars emerge in the shadow of war and a resurgent far right

    Young men in blue or white football shirts, some of the draped in England flags, look up tensely. Some of them hold a hand to their head
  • Saturday, 29 June, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Simon Schama’s history of British elections

    As voters prepare to head to the polls, the historian reflects on campaigns through the centuries and their depiction in great art

    Against an idyllic-seeming landscape and blue sky, people jostle and argue on a wooden polling booth. One person seems to be being forced to make a signature. In the background, a coach is overturning
  • Saturday, 22 June, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Will France fall to populism?

    In some ways it already has, argues political scientist Olivier Roy

    A group of people sit or stand on the grass waving French flags
  • Saturday, 15 June, 2024
    Life & Arts
    After Baillie Gifford, who is ‘clean’ enough to fund the arts?

    The campaign against the asset manager has left festivals struggling to adapt to a new age of protest

  • Saturday, 8 June, 2024
    Life & Arts
    What happened to liberal conservatism?

    The liberal side of the Tory tradition is everywhere in retreat. Much depends on whether it can reassert itself

    The back of a man in a white shirt, no  jacket, in a marquee adorned with lots of small union jack flags
  • Saturday, 1 June, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Return to Janesville — life after manufacturing in America’s heartland

    When its GM plant closed in 2008, the small Wisconsin city was hit hard. What does its present state tell us about the US today?

    A delivery driver walks to his van, which is parked on a street near a shop awning and a stars and stripes mural
  • Saturday, 25 May, 2024
    Life & Arts
    What went wrong with capitalism

    America has become unhealthily dependent on loose money and big government, argues Ruchir Sharma

  • Saturday, 18 May, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Interview with a soldier

    Novelist Chigozie Obioma spent years seeking out veterans of the Biafran war. Then an encounter with an active serviceman helped him understand the conflict that still haunts Nigeria

    Three soldiers holding rifles stand on a street where there are many spent bullets
  • Saturday, 11 May, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Jürgen Klopp and the leading of Liverpool

    How did the German football manager cast such a spell over the city? There was much more to it than results, writes Lynsey Hanley

    Football fans in red scarves stand in the street looking into the distance
  • Saturday, 4 May, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Lessons from history for the modern Middle East

    The ‘Damascus Events’ of 1860 are a warning of how societies can collapse into violence — and also an example of how they can recover

    A young man walks past a lone tree growing among the ruins of buildings
  • Saturday, 27 April, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The week that shook Columbia

    Protests over Gaza at the New York university have led to divisions and arrests. History professor Mark Mazower gives a first-hand account

    A crowd of people gather in a college square where tents have been pitched for protesters
  • Saturday, 20 April, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Kant and the case for peace

    Three centuries after his birth, the Prussian philosopher’s arguments for a rational, clear-eyed pacifism are more relevant than ever

    An illustration of a man in a military suit holding his hat
  • Saturday, 13 April, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The untold human stories of China’s economic boom

    There’s a personal dimension to the nation’s rapid transformation that is crucial to our understanding of it — yet mostly hidden from view

    A girl or young woman with long black hair, white blouse, skirt and trainers sits on a wall facing towards a cityscape of tower blocks and a gleaming skyscraper
  • Saturday, 6 April, 2024
    Life & Arts
    AI keeps going wrong. What if it can’t be fixed?

    Pessimists warn it could wipe out humanity. Optimists hail a medical revolution. Henry Mance meets the sceptics who argue that the technology is simply flawed

    A robot hand with six fingers reaching out to a human hand for a point of connection
  • Saturday, 30 March, 2024
    Life & Arts
    What’s the point of private members’ clubs?

    Restrictive membership policies, elitism, overexpansion — London clubland is under fire. Joy Lo Dico explains why people are still queueing to get in

    People standing in a room drinking
  • Saturday, 23 March, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The promise and perils of the egg-freezing revolution

    It’s fraught with difficulties yet many people are seeking to free themselves from the limits of their biological clock. India Ross recounts a personal journey

  • Saturday, 16 March, 2024
    Life & Arts
    What crypto (still) gets wrong

    As Sam Bankman-Fried awaits sentencing this month for fraud, digital assets are booming again. Yet the problems that exposed his empire in 2022 are as relevant today as they were then

  • Saturday, 9 March, 2024
    Life & Arts
    The fight for Germany’s ‘memory culture’

    Taking responsibility for the Holocaust is at the core of national identity. But this collective commitment faces challenges from both left and right

    Passersby walk by brass memorials to Holocaust victims embedded in the pavement stones of a street
  • Saturday, 2 March, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Hauser & Wirth: the Swiss gallery that went global

    The family-owned business has risen swiftly, mixing exclusivity with an expansive vision of the good life. John Gapper goes in search of its secrets

    People chat in a gallery in front of large painting of a woman’s head, her face made up of colourful abstract shapes
  • Saturday, 24 February, 2024
    Life & Arts
    Can a friendship app cure loneliness?

    As health systems raise the alarm over social isolation, a wave of start-ups is holding out the promise of authentic real-world connection

    A woman’s hand holds a phone that shows the picture of a small dog with the words ‘Hello Stranger’
  • Saturday, 17 February, 2024
    Life & Arts
    ‘The war has become the background of life’ — Andrey Kurkov on Ukraine two years on

    As the second anniversary of the full-scale Russian invasion approaches, the acclaimed novelist reflects on his country’s efforts to keep on ‘keeping on’

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