Do you want to break up with your phone in 30-days

According to Catherine Price, a science journalist and author and her essays have appeared in The Best American Science Writing, The New York Times and Popular Science, we have fallen headlong into our relationship with phones without taking time to think about our behaviour. So before doing ourselves more damage, we should follow a 30-day…

Every structure tells a story

Renzo Piano,  the architect of the Shard, Western Europe’s tallest building, the engineering feats are revealed by the inspirational female engineer Roma Agrawal, who looks at how construction has evolved from the mud huts of our ancestors to skyscrapers of steel that reach several hundreds of meters into the sky. She reveals how engineers have…

Unsolved murder of a reclusive man in Hampstead Heath

Allan Chappelow, writer and Fabian socialist and biographer of George Bernard Shaw was found savagely beaten to death in May 2006, at his north-we London home in Hampstead. The neighbours took it for granted the 86-year-old as a recluse, if always polite. Chappelow’s body lay undiscovered for over four weeks. Several blows with a hammer…

Identity crisis in Britain’s failure to deal with its colonial past

Afua Hirsch, the writer, and Broadcaster, created a national identity crisis in Britain’s failure to come to terms with its colonial past. “The past is past, You can’t rewrite history”  former V&A Director Sir Roy Strong said. Hirsch attempted to fill crucial gaps in British recollection of the colonial story, Born in Norway to a…

Zadie Smith’s impressive essays exposes the Follies of showbiz

Zadie’s centrifugal styled collection of 31 essays there is a piece called “Meet Justin Bieber!” the celebrated Canadian Teenage pop idol. The ethics of Bieber’s near-namesake, the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber, whose instance that true meetings demand an emotionally deep encounter between “I” and “Thou” rather than the selfish use of human being as another…

Virginia Woolf interjected in changing the role of women in society

Adeline Virginia Woolf, an English writer born in 22, Hyde Park Gate in Kensington, London on 25th January 1882, committed suicide in Lewes on 28th March 1941, was one of the foremost modernists of the 20th century who pioneered using a stream of consciousness as a narrative device. Virginia Woolf, the youngest daughter of successful…

“Be precise in your speech” Peterson

Jordan Peterson a clinical psychologist and professor at the University of Toronto, a YouTube intellectual with millions of online following audience, with titles such as “Identity politics and the Marxist lie of white privilege”. His online forum Quora inspired him to write his new book 12 Rules of Life, “ What are the most valuable…

GDP is unreliable for measuring success

Twenty years after former president Bill Clinton‘s ramping up material prosperity economy, bons mots, the world’s developed economies are wealthier than ever, in real terms more than 70 per cent larger than they were in 1992. But Bill Clinton’s verdict went wrong, as the golden age of popular social and economic analysis explains why an…

Wolff’s explosive insight into Trump’s presidency

Michael Wolff’s controversial expose of the White House and the furore surrounding it has already ended Trump’s alliance with Steve Bannon,  who became his biggest source. Bannon quite his job as head of Breitbart News having lost the confidence of his financial backers. Wolff does not respect the meaning of “off the record” and reconstructed…

Battle of the Dolls

Orly Lobel, a professor of law at the University of San Diego,  traces back to Barbie, the blonde bombshell’s roots to Bild Lilli, a sexually suggestive German toy made for adults. In 1959 Mattel, founded by Ruth and Elliot Handler, Launched a successor for American girls and named after their daughter Barbara. Soon Barbie captured…