Oscar Rickett
Drukkenbolte og nazister forsøgte at skabe "det perfekte samfund" og endte i storslået fiasko
Gabriele D’Annunzio var glad for hummer og kokain, og han påstod at have elsket med flere tusind kvinder. Selv om hans forsøg på at skabe et perfekt samfund mislykkedes totalt, var både Hitler og Mussolini hans store fans.
Hvad er det dog, der foregår i Storbritannien? En forklaring til resten af verden
Kan du ikke heller finde hoved og hale i, hvad det er de har gang i på de britiske øer? Hjælpen er på vej.
Sådan har soldater været blæste på narko i næsten alle krige
I sin nye bog Shooting Up forklarer den polske historiker Lukasz Kamienski om brugen af stoffer i krigsførelse - lige fra Vikingerne til terrorangrebene i Mumbai.
Frankly, We Loved Morrissey's Erotic Writing, so We Asked Him to Reimagine Some Classic Sex Scenes
How would Moz have done Ghost? And what about Titanic? Answers within.
I Went to See The Libertines in Nottingham to See if They Still Mean Anything in the Age of Thinkpiece Pop
The rakish idealistic boys of yesteryear have become the portly realistic men of today.
These Swedish Reporters Spent 438 Days in an Ethiopian Prison for Their 'Terrorist' Journalism
They were shot, faced mock execution and were left to rot in jail because they were travelling with a group of rebel fighters on the way to investigate an oil company.
Being Mindful of the Language Surrounding Mental Health Isn't 'PC Gone Mad' – It's Basic Humanity
Considering the tabloid headlines surrounding Andreas Lubitz's depression, how far have we really come since the Sun's infamous "Bonkers Bruno" splash in the way we publicly acknowledge mental illness?
The 'Dangerous Delusions' About How to Help the World's Poor
I spoke to one of the people behind a report called "The Poor Are Getting Richer and Other Dangerous Delusions" about how this week's World Economic Forum in Davos will get things wrong.
In the Wake of Charlie Hebdo, I Saw Two Reggae Legends Unite a Paris Crowd
The Twinkle Brothers have played together for over five decades, but on Saturday they sang as if their lives depended on it.
Fear and Unity at the Largest March in French History
Millions of Parisians took to the streets yesterday to show that the Charlie Hebdo massacre won't divide them – and to show up the hypocrisy of the world leaders in attendance.