Tag: Anthony Daniels

Speaking Skin: Reflections on Alexandre Lacassagne and Tattoos

Alexandre Lacassagne, the French forensic pathologist who published a book on tattoos in 1881, would have been astonished at, and puzzled by, the explosion of elaborate and professional tattoos in the general population in the last three decades.

An Essay in Uglification

People often go to considerable trouble to make themselves ugly, or as ugly as possible. Nor is this simply a trait of rebellious youth that is trying to assert its independence and that will take the easiest route available to shock its elders. Now, perhaps for the first time, the ugliness of youthful rebellion has become inscribed deeply into society, virtually as the norm.

On the Rural Life

The relative advantages of urban and rural life have long been a matter of dispute, never fully resolved because never fully resolvable.

The Malignity of Bad Taste

The Western artistic tradition is exhausted, modernism being both a symptom and a cause of that exhaustion.

Taxi Cab Reflections

Mayor Anne Hidalgois currently engaged on a campaign to save the planet by making the streets of Paris hideous and increasingly unbearable.

Norman Stone (1941-2019)

Professor Norman Stone, the renowned historian who died aged 78 on June 19 this year, was an outstandingly colourful figure on a British intellectual landscape that has long had an accelerating tendency to the flat, dull, monochrome, and ideologically uniform. Norman Stone spoke his mind and lived as he pleased, for which he was both […]