Today’s undergraduates: born into a second life
A rift will always separate digital natives from others, Shahidha Bari believes

A rift will always separate digital natives from others, Shahidha Bari believes

The work of Thomas Pynchon makes its Hollywood debut in a nostalgia noir tale faithfully adapted by a kindred spirit

Research tools have been revolutionised by the internet but, asks John Gilbey, are they reliable?

Angelia Wilson on a prison system that has eroded democratic institutions and exacerbated social injustices

Vicky Duckworth on an authoritative and personal study of the people living on the St Ann’s estate in Nottingham

Andrew Blake on a study of politics and the arts in the New Labour era

Jonathan Mirsky on a revealing study about the roots of changes in sexual habits

Social media can help the literary world come alive for students, says academic Rosie Miles. Plus the latest higher education appointments

Les Gofton admires an ethnographic study exploring how workers escape the daily grind

An academic’s conviction as a paedophile was kept under wraps in the 1990s. Would a cover-up happen today, asks Geoffrey Alderman

Why are today’s students so preoccupied with protecting themselves from potentially ‘harmful’ ideas, asks Tom Slater

As he turns 80, the writer discusses the ‘golden age’ of universities and the (imagined) sexual indiscretions of academics

Helen Bynum admires a physician’s quest to distinguish alternative medicine from quackery

Picking up professor’s tab for defending himself in tribunal adds £66,000 to university’s expenses arising out of suspension

A wide range of essential under-the-radar tasks sustain academic culture, but who will perform them in an increasingly careerist academy?