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Tag: UK

All longform pieces tagged with #uk on The Slow Scroll

The Cat’s Meat Man
The Public Domain Review12 Feb 2025 • ~2550 words

Kathryn Hughes writes about the lives of Victorian London's "cat's meat men," who sold cheap meat to pet owners. This took place during a time when public attitudes toward cats were shifting—from being seen primarily as rat catchers to becoming beloved domestic companions. The tr...

Age of Invention: How Coal Really Won
Age of Invention12 Feb 2025 • ~11800 words

Anton Howes continues tracing the history of the rise of coal, and how it transformed not just heating practices but also the economy and daily life in growing urban centers. The essay provides rich historical detail, as it highlights the interplay between technology, culture, an...

The Coventry experiment: why were Indian women in Britain given radioactive food without consent?
The Guardian11 Feb 2025 • ~5600 words

A 1969 experiment in Coventry saw 21 Indian women fed chapatis baked with radioactive isotopes, without their consent. Revisiting the history behind this unsettling study explores broader issues of trust, consent, and medical ethics within vulnerable communities.

The Do No Harm dilemma
New Statesman05 Feb 2025 • ~3000 words

Hannah Barnes explores the difficult and often conflicting responsibilities of doctors when it comes to prescribing valproate, a drug used to treat epilepsy. It is known to be extremely risky for pregnant women, but they weren’t properly informed, which turned into a scandal. Thi...

‘It was very hard to contain the emotions’: on the road with the meteorite hunters
The Guardian04 Feb 2025 • ~3900 words

When a rare meteorite falls, it springs amateur sky-watchers, scientists, and professional meteorite hunters into a treasure hunt. This piece by Helen Gordon adapted from her book focuses on the excitement surrounding the Winchcombe meteorite, and the scientists that employe meth...

Class war
New Statesman29 Jan 2025 • ~3700 words

This piece points out how private schools and inequality in education have always been a matter of debate in UK, but historically without enough political will to address it. Following some recent scrutiny and proposed tax changes for school fees, the authors call for lasting ref...

Speaking in Small Tongues
The Fence23 Jan 2025 • ~3750 words

An oil trader and an Old Etonian with a genius for PR, was Justin Welby the worst Archbishop of Canterbury since Thomas Arundel?