It’s worse than George Orwell imagined. There’s no need to ban books no one wants to read
What Aldous Huxley feared has come to pass: we are drowning in a sea of irrelevance
What Aldous Huxley feared has come to pass: we are drowning in a sea of irrelevance
Is there an Orwellian trend?
Modern-day Newspeak
Unthinkable: Always treat humanity not as a means but as an end, said the philosopher Immanuel Kant
If you’re not already an enthusiast, don’t start at Kant or Nietzsche
Truth, it turns out, is among the most difficult things to cling to
The poet and editor on keeping a loved one’s memory alive, his literary journal Irish Pages and his regard for Seamus Heaney’s work
Without preaching, Matthew Parker tells the stories of a variety of colonies and uses imperialists’ own words and deeds to shed light on an enterprise that was very far from glorious
In a Word: Dystopia dominates so much of modern literature, for obvious reasons
Patrick Freyne: The smartest thing George Orwell ever did was to turn his book into a reality TV show
Rite & Reason: In Irish public affairs, philosophical thinking could facilitate the kind of changes needed today
The best opening lines have poise, excite immediate attention or simply impress
Whether you’re crammed on a bus on the way to work or lounging with a cocktail by the pool, audiobooks are a perfect way to transport you to another place
German privacy groups claim Irish regulator behind ‘sabotage’ of EU data privacy laws
Judge to donate profits from new book on judgment writing to Ukraine relief
Residents of Russian embassy road ponder name change to Independent Ukraine Road
Councillors propose changing the name of Orwell Road where embassy is located
Derval O’Rourke won a rare non-Russian medal in discredited 2006 World Indoors
An Irishman’s Diary
Soccer’s sleight of hand: chaotic expense evidence of life, vigour and stable future prospects
A round-up of digital movie services and the entertainment content they offer this year
Society needs schools but we must not bury health risks in constructive ambiguity
The double Pulitzer prize winner’s latest is set in 1960s Harlem’s criminal underworld
New ideologies should be carefully discussed, not uncritically insinuated into general culture
An Irishman’s Diary
An Irishman’s Diary
After ‘torture’ of losing to Cork in championship, footballer is relishing return to play
Purchase of unit is Murdoch company’s second publishing buy in less than a week
George Orwell is common shorthand for ‘mean people are being mean to me because they’re mean’
Penguin owner ‘very confident’ of regulatory approval despite competition concerns
The singer-songwriter has been doing extraordinary things ever since she arrived in Britain alone aged 6
The president’s success in forcing himself into our thoughts will be his downfall
Aldous Huxley’s novel gets 21st-century makeover in new Sky One series
Current scenario heightens our perceptions and new artists will emerge from it
The Government needs to worry about who is flying in, not who is flying out
New Yorker suffered seizures, infections, fevers, pneumonia and cerebral haemorrhages. But he overcame it all to keep his promise to his wife: ‘I’ll never stop fighting’
Welcome to The Irish Times book quiz: 10 questions to test your literary knowledge
At this time of social isolation, books offer not just consolation but a portal to the most profound human connection
Saoirse Ronan in running for Little Women, while Jessie Buckley competed for Wild Rose
‘We cannot support such a brutal and totalitarian dictatorship’
Former tánaiste Mary Harney and Joan Freeman among other recipients
Unthinkable: One of philosophy’s great debates may be down to a misunderstanding
Application only served to add a day’s worth of costs to bill – Justice Richard Humphreys
Denial makes us feel better in the short term but is not the way to deal with problems
Political rhetoric of our time is conditioned by insult and hardly concealed violence
It is a fact that if people do less and use less, then GDP will fall
Marx repeated something his friend Friedrich Engels had just written about Hegel
Cultural and national fault lines riddled the constituent nations long before Leave vote
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices