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From A to X: A Story in Letters

From A to X: A Story in Letters

A heartrending love-story and a searing indictment of authoritarianism in all its forms.

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Living theatre

Patience is running thin and tempers are flaring in Maria Golia’s apartment block.

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The Rebels' Hour

The Rebels' Hour

Lieve Joris's spellbinding account of the recent ill-starred history of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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Their guns will not conquer

Their guns will not conquer

The Karen fight ethnic cleansing in Burma with economic development

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Big Blue Ball

Big Blue Ball

Peter Gabriel threw open the doors of his Real World studios in rural England and invited an enormous bunch of musicians – Sinead O’Connor, Marta Sebestyen, Papa Wemba, Guo Yue are just a few of them – to come and jam.

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Alexandra

Alexandra

What war does to people’s humanity and how, without trust, touch and intimacy, we’re lost.

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More on the meltdown

More on the meltdown

We're all struggling day by day to make sense of the mayhem in the markets - neoconservative governments discovering the virtues of nationalization, speculators' bubbles finally bursting, doom-mongers who have been predicting the collapse of capitalism for decades suddenly worrying about their own pensions and mortgages when it arrives…

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Tanzania

Tanzania is home to the highest point in Africa as well as to Olduvai Gorge, where some of the oldest human remains have been found. It also contains most of the Serengeti region, which hosts a dazzling array of animal, bird and plant life.

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Timor, Cuba - and the making of a medical superpower

Timor, Cuba - and the making of a medical superpower

Every year Cuba, a Majority World country of only 10 million people, sends more than 30,000 volunteer medical workers to 93 countries around the world. Surgeon Katherine Edyvane recounts the little-told story from first-hand experience.

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Interview with Martha Lucía Micher Camarena

Interview with Martha Lucía Micher Camarena

Martha Lucía Micher Camarena has been battling to defend women’s rights in Mexico for decades – and last year she achieved two landmark victories.

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Aida Muluneh

Aida Muluneh

Circus antics captured by Ethiopian photographer Aida Muluneh.

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The Riddle of Qaf

The Riddle of Qaf

The Riddle of Qaf is crammed with allusions to classical literature and cod-scientific theories and it makes free (and unapologetic) use of myths and legends.

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Hear, O Israel: A Prayer Ceremony in Jazz

Hear, O Israel: A Prayer Ceremony in Jazz

17-year-old rabbi’s son – and fledgling composer – Joseph Klein lured one of the greatest names in jazz (Herbie Hancock) to join in performing a jazz prayer ceremony.

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A happy couple from the fantastically successful first Gay and Lesbian Pride March in Bengaluru (Bangalore) on 29 June 2008. Siddharth Narrain

The Fire Inside

Women who love women still leads to suicide pacts in India, often burning themselves to death. But in the wake of a groundbreaking film, lesbians are asserting themselves more – and seeing some encouraging signs of change, as Nick Harvey reports.

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Search results in a table:

Article title Description Author Published Magazine Link
From A to X: A Story in Letters

A heartrending love-story and a searing indictment of authoritarianism in all its forms.

Peter Whittaker October, 2008 416 Buy
Living theatre

Patience is running thin and tempers are flaring in Maria Golia’s apartment block.

Maria Golia October, 2008 416 Buy
The Rebels' Hour

Lieve Joris's spellbinding account of the recent ill-starred history of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Peter Whittaker October, 2008 416 Buy
Their guns will not conquer

The Karen fight ethnic cleansing in Burma with economic development

Daniel Pye October, 2008 416 Buy
Big Blue Ball

Peter Gabriel threw open the doors of his Real World studios in rural England and invited an enormous bunch of musicians – Sinead O’Connor, Marta Sebestyen, Papa Wemba, Guo Yue are just a few of them – to come and jam.

Louise Gray October, 2008 416 Buy
Alexandra

What war does to people’s humanity and how, without trust, touch and intimacy, we’re lost.

Malcolm Lewis October, 2008 416 Buy
More on the meltdown

We're all struggling day by day to make sense of the mayhem in the markets - neoconservative governments discovering the virtues of nationalization, speculators' bubbles finally bursting, doom-mongers who have been predicting the collapse of capitalism for decades suddenly worrying about their own pensions and mortgages when it arrives…

Chris Brazier October, 2008 416 Buy
Tanzania

Tanzania is home to the highest point in Africa as well as to Olduvai Gorge, where some of the oldest human remains have been found. It also contains most of the Serengeti region, which hosts a dazzling array of animal, bird and plant life.

Wairagala Wakabi October, 2008 416 Buy
Timor, Cuba - and the making of a medical superpower

Every year Cuba, a Majority World country of only 10 million people, sends more than 30,000 volunteer medical workers to 93 countries around the world. Surgeon Katherine Edyvane recounts the little-told story from first-hand experience.

Katherine Edyvane October, 2008 416 Buy
Interview with Martha Lucía Micher Camarena

Martha Lucía Micher Camarena has been battling to defend women’s rights in Mexico for decades – and last year she achieved two landmark victories.

Cheryl Morris October, 2008 416 Buy
Aida Muluneh

Circus antics captured by Ethiopian photographer Aida Muluneh.

Aida Muluneh October, 2008 416 Buy
The Riddle of Qaf

The Riddle of Qaf is crammed with allusions to classical literature and cod-scientific theories and it makes free (and unapologetic) use of myths and legends.

Peter Whittaker October, 2008 416 Buy
Hear, O Israel: A Prayer Ceremony in Jazz

17-year-old rabbi’s son – and fledgling composer – Joseph Klein lured one of the greatest names in jazz (Herbie Hancock) to join in performing a jazz prayer ceremony.

Louise Gray October, 2008 416 Buy
Palestinian ambulance

Photo by: Wend Lear

Simon Loffler October, 2008 416 Buy
The Fire Inside

Women who love women still leads to suicide pacts in India, often burning themselves to death. But in the wake of a groundbreaking film, lesbians are asserting themselves more – and seeing some encouraging signs of change, as Nick Harvey reports.

Nick Harvey October, 2008 416 Buy