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The Guardian Weekly

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May 30, 2025

In near-future China, a girl and her father flee from flooding in a rich fable of migration

- By Xan Brooks

The sea takes many forms in fiction. It was an adventure playground in Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island and a rowdy neighbour in Daphne du Maurier's Jamaica Inn. It played the wine-dark seducer in Homer's Odyssey and the snot-green tormentor in Joyce's Ulysses. But while its colour can change and its humour may vary, its fictional properties remain reassuringly stable.

The sea is our unconscious, a repository of memory, the beginning and end of all things. It’s what Jules Verne described as the “Living Infinite”.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

A bold attempt to convince sceptics that neuroscience has proved Freud was right

Vladimir Nabokov notoriously dismissed the \"vulgar, shabby, and fundamentally medieval world\" of the ideas of Sigmund Freud, whom he called.

time to read

3 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

A fascinating and wideranging account of the good-and the bad-of the new obesity drugs

Few aspects of being human have generated judgment, scorn and conmore demnation than a person's size, shape and weight - particularly if you are female.

time to read

1 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Can Cuba survive?

Disillusioned with the revolution after 68 years of US sanctions and a shattered economy, one in four Cubans have left the country in the past four years. Now it seems the Trump administration has the regime in its sights and its future is unclear

time to read

11 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Are our bodies really full of microplastics?

Doubts over whether plastic particles have infiltrated human tissue have grown, with one high-profile study called a 'joke'

time to read

5 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

The team reinventing abortion advice for TikTok age

What do a purple cartoon cat and abortion have in common? Nothing - and that is the point, say the women behind Jacarandas, a Colombian abortion helpline.

time to read

3 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Talk of The town

Michael Sheen on building a new Welsh National Theatre company, as its first show reimagines an American classic in his homeland

time to read

7 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Parallel lives

Piet Mondrian found fame with his grid-like paintings. But a reappraisal of little-known British artist Marlow Moss repositions her influence on his work

time to read

4 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Melting ice brings geopolitical jostling for Arctic assets

Lying between the US and Russia, Greenland has become a critical frontline as global heating opens up the Arctic.

time to read

2 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Every cent you take?

Sting and his former bandmates have been in court over a royalties dispute-the latest chapter in the song's fractious story

time to read

3 mins

January 23, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Shah's son stakes his claim to lead the country

Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s former pro-western monarch, has predicted the country’s Islamic regime will fall and claimed he is “uniquely” placed to head a successor government.

time to read

2 mins

January 23, 2026

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