Jaimee Marshall
Jaimee Marshall is an American culture and lifestyle writer who has written for Evie Magazine and Business Insider among others. She tweets at @0rang3youglad
Dune and progressive media illiteracy
Leftist moralism obscures thematic depth in its frantic rush to judge
Most Read
Why they hated Ann Widdecombe
Fair-minded people could agree or disagree with her opinions. Left-wing bigots hated her for not abandoning them
Gary Stevenson is wrong about wealth taxes
The popular economist is irritating, but more importantly he is mistaken
Solent mean
Solent PhD student frozen out after introducing Roger Scruton into seminar
A chaplain’s vindication
The case of Dr Bernard Randall has exposed the rot in our institutions
The myth of banned books
If transgression is fun and easy, it is probably not transgressive
Broken windows
If small instances of disorder are neglected, greater ones will soon be committed
Spielberg’s ho-hum space chase
Those describing it as a masterpiece cannot have seen Saving Private Ryan or Schindler’s List
How should Christian organisations respond to illegal migration?
It is wrong to think that Christianity demands that we open our borders
A win for academic freedom
The university free speech complaints scheme is (finally) going ahead
The sacrifice that changed Naipaul
The humiliation of his father, forced to slaughter a goat to atone for
angering Hindus, made the writer wary of insulting religion
A revolutionary king
The monarch’s vision of “harmony” will have lasting impact
What difference does he make?
Andy Burnham is not the answer to our woes because Burnhamism is not replicable
Rendering the word of God in English
500 years ago, William Tyndale published his groundbreaking New Testament translation
Why must everything move to Manchester?
Northern England is being framed in patronising reductionist terms
The hollow men
T. S. Eliot understood contemporary politicians better than they understand themselves
The malicious and the mad
Two recent productions offer two different perspectives on dark sides of masculinity
