News
Oasis remain one of the most influential bands in modern music. Here’s why their return to the stage still feels historic.
Two Irish television writers discuss their participation in the European-wide VR writers' room, Words Across Europe.
Writer-Director Gemma Creagh sat down with HeadStuff to talk about her directorial debut, Conveyance, a horror-comedy short about a couple trying to navigate Ireland’s housing market. After viewing a ...
Thomas Caffrey reviews Celine Song's mis-marketed rom comMaterialists, which features little romance and even less comedy.
Have you ever wondered why your dog’s ears prick up even when you hear nothing? You sit reading the newspaper when Toby runs towards the door barking as if his best friend is outside. It could be ...
Joseph Fouché was a bloody-handed architect of the French Terror; but he avoided any backlash for it. There's always employment for a man without scruples.
With the remake of The Magnificent Seven hitting our screens, Stephen Porzio looks at the legacy of Sergio Corbucci, the legendary western director.
Diogenes was one of the more eccentric of the Greek philosophers. Homeless and irascible, scandalous and obscene, he still inspired later generations.
Abel Debritto, a former Fulbright and Marie Curie scholar, works in the digital humanities and is a certified Iyengar yoga teacher. He is the author of Charles Bukowski, King of the Underground, and ...
The Birth of Venus: How Botticelli focused more on the idealism of the female figure, along with mythology and symbolism in his secular pieces.
Beatriz Kimpa Vita was a charismatic preacher in the Kingdom of Kongo with a radical doctrine - that Mary and Jesus had been been black Kongolese Africans.
The genius of Eugène François Vidocq lay in one simple principle. In order to catch a criminal, you had to be able think like a criminal. And in his case that was easy, because he was one. He’s ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results