What does it mean for books, music, architecture, philosophy, and art around the world?
Nathan Waddell and Laura Ryan talk to Jade Munslow Ong about writers depicting precarity
Rana Mitter looks at Bauhaus in Delhi, Japanese and South African novels and Mexican art.
Matthew Sweet and guests look at the manifesto celebrating youth, technology and violence.
Will Self, Alexandra Harris, Kevin Le Gendre and Owen Hatherley build up a manifesto.
Jade Munslow Ong reads 20s writing by Solomon T Plaatje, Roy Campbell and William Plomer.
David Peace and Natasha Pulley look at the writing of Akutagawa and the film by Kurosawa.
Matthew Sweet discusses James Joyce's groundbreaking novel of 1939.
A landmark edition celebrating Proust's great novel In Search of Lost Time.
Matthew Sweet investigates objects and events from 1922, the crucial year for modernism.
Lisa Dwan and Anthony Howell with readings from the age of Joyce, Eliot and jazz.
Why do writers and audiences keep coming back to one-day artworks like Joyce's Ulysses?
Five Irish writers re-read James Joyce's difficult classic novel Ulysses.
A project to reimagine the Dada arts movement now, and reflections on satire and nonsense.
Matthew Sweet on Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Adorno, Carnap and other philosophical greats.
Matthew Sweet and guests look at 1921's The Witch-Cult in Western Europe and witches now.
Can you solve all the problems of philosophy in one book? Shahidha Bari and guests debate.
Philip Dodd presents a special edition devoted Virginia Woolf's novel Mrs Dalloway.
Anne McElvoy marks the 1921 creation of Northern Ireland with historians and writers.