

The New Society | culture from the New Statesman
The New Statesman
Your weekly review of culture, life and society from the New Statesman, hosted by Tanjil Rashid.Featuring interviews with literary and artistic greats, reviews of the latest cultural moments, and in-depth discussion to help you understand how culture shapes society – and our place in it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 28, 2026 • 52min
Do novelists understand consciousness better than neuroscientists?
Michael Pollan, a writer best known for his work on the effect of psychedelics, has taken a journey into the inner mind.For much of modern history, we’ve understood the mind in comparison to our most advanced machines. Once it was clockwork, then looms, now computers. Each metaphor promises clarity - the ability to be mapped and modelled - but each, in its own way, falls short.Drawing on philosophy, literature and his own experiments with altered states, in Michael Pollan takes aim at this habit of thinking. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mar 21, 2026 • 29min
How Elon Musk redefined power
In 2025, Elon Musk took on an extraordinary role inside Washington, leading something called the Department of Government Efficiency - or Doge.What followed was a radical experiment: an attempt to remake the machinery of the state using the logic of Silicon Valley and the language of memes.To understand that moment, it helps to understand Musk himself. This is a figure shaped by his upbringing in apartheid South Africa and by coming of age alongside the early internet. He built his reputation by disrupting entire industries - even extending his reach beyond Earth - by moving fast, ignoring convention, and pushing his teams to extremes.So what happens when you apply that philosophy to the state? Tanjil Rashid is joined by Ben Tarnoff and Quinn Slobodian. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mar 14, 2026 • 32min
The biggest film you’ve never heard of is up for 2 Oscars
Despite KPop Demon Hunters becoming Netflix’s most-watched film in history and dominating music charts for months, it’s also the kind of cultural phenomenon many people might never have encountered.The animated musical feature has been cleaning up at awards season and this weekend it could pick up two Oscars.In this episode of the New Society, we discuss how the film became a global hit and the rise of K-pop and fandom culture. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mar 7, 2026 • 30min
Metrics now control our lives
C. Thi Nguyen, philosopher and professor at the University of Utah and author of The Score, studies games, gamification, and how metrics shape social life. He talks about how likes, rankings and single numbers hijack judgment. He traces why institutions prefer simple counts, when metrics help large systems, and what gets lost when life is reduced to scores.

Feb 28, 2026 • 24min
What it’s like to be played by Claire Foy
In 2014, Helen Macdonald published H is for Hawk - a book that arrived, at least on the surface, as a memoir about grief: the death of their father, and Macdonald's decision to train and live with a goshawk in the aftermath.It was nature writing, literary biography, cultural history, and a deeply personal account of what happens when someone steps sideways out of ordinary life and into something more feral. Readers found their own stories in it about parenthood, identity, politics, and the uneasy relationship between the human world and the wild.More than a decade on, that story has taken another form.You can read more from Helen Macdonald here Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 21, 2026 • 39min
Does reading make you a better person? with Dominic Sandbrook
For one of the most famous historians in Britain, conquering the past is not enough.This month, alongside co-host Tabitha Syrett, Dominic Sandbrook is launching a new podcast - this time shifting his focus from history to literature.Tanjil Rashid sat down with Sandbrook to talk about this new venture, what he’s reading (he insists it’s a balanced diet) and why reading still matters, not just to us as individuals, but to the health of society itself. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 14, 2026 • 23min
Wuthering Heights is a disgusting film, but is it a love story?
Wuthering Heights is a story that has been told and retold, adapted and reinterpreted so many times since publication in 1847.Every generation seems to rediscover Emily Brontë’s ever-enduring novel, and every generation seems convinced it finally understands it.Now, it’s British filmmaker Emerald Fennell’s turn. And once again, we’re left asking: is this a love story, a ghost story, a story of obsession, or something stranger that refuses to settle into any single interpretation?Tanjil Rashid is joined by Lucasta Miller. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 7, 2026 • 27min
Is the climate crisis spiritual? The King thinks so
A new documentary, Finding Harmony: A King’s Vision, offers a rare glimpse into the deeper ideas shaping King Charles’s view of the world. Known for decades as an environmental campaigner, the King has often spoken about the need for “harmony” between humanity, nature and the environment - but what does he really mean by that?Tanjil Rashid is joined by historian Mark Sedgwick. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jan 31, 2026 • 26min
Infinite Jest is a novel for 2026
Thirty years ago, David Foster Wallace published Infinite Jest - a novel so sprawling, so formally strange, and so unnervingly prescient that it has never quite stopped happening. Set in a near-future North America obsessed with pleasure, entertainment, and escape, the book asked a question that feels even sharper today than it did in 1996: what happens when a culture confuses happiness with anaesthesia?Tanjil Rashid is joined by DT Max and Jonathan Derbyshire to discuss why the novel still matters, and what it can tell us about the world we’ve built since. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jan 24, 2026 • 34min
People around the world are falling in love with AI
Over 100 million people around the world have downloaded AI companion apps. Friends, therapists, lovers ... mediums - for some, their closest connection in this life is a chatbot.How did we get here?Catharine Hughes is joined by James Muldoon, sociologist and author of Love Machines: How Artificial Intelligence is Transforming Our Relationships. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


