Tags are like keywords or labels that have been added to articles make it easier to find later. Later if you click on a tag for 'news' you will be taken to a page that returns all articles with that keyword attached to it.
Articles tagged with 'sociology'
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Anything, Everything for Anyone by Edward Docx
Novelist Edward Docx confronts the ‘anything, everything for anyone at any time’ that makes up our news today
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Are We Telling a Lie About the Land? by Molly Dineen
In 2007, Channel 4 broadcast The Lie of the Land by controversial documentary filmmaker Molly Dineen, who talks to Rosie Boycott about her passion for the countryside
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Heroin: the Global Lie by Nick Davies
Nick Davies, the award-winning journalist, reiterates the case for legalising heroin that he first raised in his Channel 4 one-hour special in 2001
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Skunk: the Dirty Great Profit by Horatio Clare
Prize-winning author Horatio Clare describes how marketing changed cannabis into something far more sinister
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Here’s One I Made Earlier by Rose Prince
Rose Prince, food columnist, local produce campaigner, author and cook, explains how educational food TV morphed into entertainment, spearheaded by Channel 4
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Changing Tastes? by Tamasin Day-Lewis
To eat properly we need to take food seriously argues Tamasin Day-Lewis, the food writer and author
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Human Survival by Phil Agland
Phil Agland is the award-winning director of Channel 4 documentaries including Beyond the Clouds, Baka and Shanghai Vice. Here, he unearths another point of view
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Sex & the Modern Girl by Michele Hanson
Michele Hanson , whose column The Age of Dissent is published in The Guardian, points out that sex has caused problems for girls for centuries
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The Spanish Sent an Armada by Ivo Stourton
The ongoing paranoia of Britain’s Catholic community is explored by novelist and Catholic Ivo Stourton
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Transcending Entertainment by Gautam Malkani
Gautam Malkani on the day Big Brother started asking interesting questions about race
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The Ghosts In Our Machines by Andrew O’Hagan
The rise of celebrity in Britain is actually the rise of a populist ethos. Andrew O’Hagan explains
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The Meaning of Design by Alain de Botton
Alain de Botton, author of The Architecture of Happiness, investigates the emotional values at the heart of design
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I’ll Huff and I’ll Puff by Nigel Coates
Avant-garde architect and designer Nigel Coates watches new self-architects
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Goldfinger’s Lair by Daisy Leitch
Daisy Leitch discovers property really is about Location, Location, Location
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The Style Junkies by Peter York
Peter York , who mapped the Sloane Ranger 30 years ago, now explores the expansion of the style-conscious since Channel 4 launched
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Too Much, Too Young by Oliver James
Oliver James , the clinical psychologist and author, chronicles the dilemmas faced by today’s youth
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The Dying Rooms to China’s Stolen Children by Brian Woods
Brian Woods , pre-eminent maker of human rights documentaries, revisits the implications of China’s One Child Policy
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From Brookside to Supernanny by Frank Furedi
Frank Furedi , Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent, explains how Brookside’s existence informed the intellectual elite
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Family Trees by Rachel Cusk
Rachel Cusk , the award-winning writer of The Lucky Ones, believes that it is the conception of self that determines family culture in any age
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Post-Nuclear Family Values by Gautam Malkani
Gautam Malkani presupposes that it is the emotional absence of fathers that is the strongest factor in aggression among young men
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Body Image Rules by Liz Jones
Liz Jones , Fashion Editor of The Daily Mail, wonders why women hate their bodies
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Television From a New World by Anthony Haden-Guest
Art world insider and journalist Anthony Haden-Guest finds that the best US TV shows on Channel 4 map out a new reality
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Dancing Towards the Icebergs by Jonty Ollif-Cooper
History teacher Jonty Ollif-Cooper , having spent some time in Channel 4’s Edwardian Country House, wonders how alike we are to the Edwardians
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Notes on the New Camp by Nicky Haslam
Nicky Haslam , international decorator and social columnist, parses the past and present language and culture of camp
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You Are What You Share by Charles Leadbetter
Charles Leadbetter , an independent writer and advisor on technology and creativity. Outlines a technological future of collaborative creativity founded in the ethos of folk art
