- Guest Writers
- Prose Finds
- Clive James - Articles since 2005Current Interest:Since "The Meaning of Recognition":
- Words Fail in the Pacific
- Exit Peter Porter
- Les Murray's New Book
- Stephen Edgar's New Book
- Poetry Heaven, Election Hell
- Updike's Last Poems
- Mad about 'Mad Men'
- On Pat Kavanagh
- Artists in Exile
- Bea Miles, Vagrant
- Crime Movie Music
- On Leni Riefenstahl
- On British Films
- Exit Roth's Ghost
- The Writer's Revenge
- The Question of Karl Kraus
- On Crime Fiction
- Saying Famous Things
- Kingsley Amis Biography
- The Robert Hughes Memoirs
- Happiness Writes White
- On Modern Australian Painting
- On American Movie Critics
- On A.D. Hope
- Perfectly Bad Sentence
- Insult to the Language
- On Camille Paglia
- On John Bayley
- On John Anderson
- On Elias Canetti
- Starting with Sludge
- On Jonathan James-Moore
- On Ian Adam
- On Diamond Jim McClelland
- On Nicole Kidman
- Show Me the Horror
- On Niki Lauda
- On Damon Hill
Extracts: - Lectures and Speeches




In which English-speaking country is the English language falling apart fastest? Britain. Are things as bad in Australia? I hope not. In Britain, in 2006, the Labour government is still trying to fix Britain's education system, but surely one of the reasons it's so hard to fix is that most of the people who should know how are themselves the system's victims, and often don't even seem to realise it. They need less confidence. Even when they are ready to admit there might be a problem, few of them realise that they lack the language to describe it.