Saltburn makes you look at desire and sex in a way that is both interesting and tricky to look at.
All by Guests
Saltburn makes you look at desire and sex in a way that is both interesting and tricky to look at.
This is what it’s really like to be a teacher who knows all the best places at school to go and cry.
Feminism is not a complicated ideology. But, with so many diverse interpretations of the topic, the perception of this movement has been skewed over time. Now the idea of “bad” feminism has begun to take shape.
As the Tory party scrabble to choose a less abhorrent leader, Claire Wilsher unpacks why she won’t be dancing in the streets just yet.
This Women’s History Month, we chatted to Farhanah Mamoojee about her mission to commemorate the South and South-East Asian nannies of Victorian and Edwardian Hackney.
This article contains spoilers… then again if you’ve read the title then you already know what happens.
The concept of sensitivity reading may be new to you – but is it already on its way out?
Rosie Hewlett, author of award-winning novel, Medusa, speaks to Harpy Magazine about the enduring power of a four thousand year old myth.
From detailed diagrams of the uterus to suffragette slogans; embellished prints of inspirational women to vibrators spouting positive vibes (geddit?), the riot of feminist embroidery is as powerful as it is creative – but why?
After a truly terrible week for women’s safety, Katherine Grayson takes a look at the deeply unsettling repercussions of the language we use every day.
The theme of International Women’s Day this year is #ChooseToChallenge, a call to each of us to call out gender bias and inequality wherever we see it. Here’s how you can advocate for equality at work.
This Women’s History Month, guest writer Katherine Grayson spoke to the Mary Anning Rocks campaign about the past, the future and the fossilised faeces of ancient fish.
I love love. Unapologetically and wholeheartedly, to the point that it makes people around me uncomfortable. However, there is one celebration which sanctions – nay, encourages – such an outpouring. I’m talking, of course, about Galentine’s Day.
Meet Anna and Lily, two creatives on a mission to unite artists and arts workers and be catalysts for positive change in the city.
On the 30 of December 2020, the Argentinian National Congress voted to legalise abortion. This is a huge victory - one celebrated across the world. But will this green tide sweep the rest of Latin America?
Imagine, for one heady moment, perfume advertising that simply represents a diversity of bodies instead of recycling again and again the sculpted silhouette of the model du jour. Would it change the way we look at ourselves after seeing a beauty ad?
In the midst of these strange and unprecedented times, one constant remains: the indie softboi… and he’s got something in common with 19th century poet, Charles Baudelaire.