Archive for 2014

On integrity

February 13, 2014 1 Comment
On integrity

In writing a forthcoming book about the art of chairing I’ve found myself thinking about the idea of integrity. (Integrity, I maintain, is one of the essential characteristics that any good Chair should possess.) What is integrity?  Does it mean anything substantial when used in relation to human behaviour?  Why should it be important in […]

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The overcoat

February 5, 2014 1 Comment
The overcoat

I was sitting reading in the front room yesterday when a sharp rap on the window made me jump.  A man stood at the door.   Only the sharp features of his face were visible; the rest of his body was protected from the cold wind and rain by a thick shell of industrial yellow.  Behind […]

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Cof, dychymyg, enwau lleoedd

January 29, 2014 1 Comment
Cof, dychymyg, enwau lleoedd

I’r Cymry mae enwau lleoedd yn bwysig.  Bron bob mis adrodda’r cyfryngau ryw ffrae neu’i gilydd amdanyn nhw: Varteg (Saesneg) v Y Farteg (Cymraeg) neu, yn fwy arwyddocaol, Cwm March v Stallion Valley (bathiad anffodus newydd sbon).  I’r rhan fwyaf o bobl pethau i’w trysori ydyn nhw, o achos eu bod yn cadw cof hanesyddol […]

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Is it true that public services can’t cooperate?

January 22, 2014 2 Comments
Is it true that public services can’t cooperate?

Richard Sennett’s Together: the rituals, pleasures and politics of cooperation (2012) is one of those books that’s so full of acute observations, surprising examples and novel connections that it stays long in the memory and sparks all kinds of thoughts, months after an initial reading. Sennett is a distinguished US ethnographer, but part of the […]

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Death of a satirist

January 16, 2014 0 Comments
Death of a satirist

News of the death of Simon Hoggart a couple of weeks ago caused widespread dismay.  For so many years he skewered politicians with wit and ridicule in his parliamentary sketches and on the radio it seems hardly possible that it’s all come to an end so suddenly.  Who will we have in future to talk […]

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Whistler’s long voyage: Rotherhithe to Battersea

January 8, 2014 0 Comments
Whistler’s long voyage: Rotherhithe to Battersea

‘Whistler and the Thames’, which comes to an end at the Dulwich Picture Gallery on 12 January, is the best sort of exhibition: one that places right in front of your retina an artist previously spotted only with peripheral vision. James McNeill Whistler was born in Lowell, Mass. in 1834, moved with his family to […]

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