Articles by Jason Cowley
Jason Cowley / February 20, 2003
A Jewish Museum in Berlin, a war museum in Manchester, even a Rwanda massacre memorial - is Libeskind being typecast? If so, it may help him to the biggest prize in contemporary architecture
Jason Cowley / June 20, 2002
Football has become rich and cosmopolitan and at the heart of our entertainment culture. But what about the footballers themselves?
Jason Cowley / July 20, 2001
Is Philip Roth the greatest of living American novelists?
Jason Cowley / October 20, 2000
The Jeremiahs of cultural decline are self-serving and wrong
Jason Cowley / March 20, 2000
Russian literary culture is in disarray but it can still have a good row about its most fashionable writer
Jason Cowley / August 20, 1998
The author of "Crash" and "Empire of the Sun" talks to Prospect about sex, technology and the 1960s. Do his dark obsessions amount to a serious quest to understand modernity?
Jason Cowley / June 20, 1998
To his critics he is an arrogant apologist for colonialism and a cheerleader for Hindu nationalism. To his admirers he is the finest writer in the English language and creator of a new literary form....
Jason Cowley / December 20, 1997
British fiction is thriving, according to publishers. But having read countless novels as a Booker judge, Jason Cowley is disenchanted by the shallowness of Britain's literary vision. Is it a passing...
Jason Cowley / August 20, 1997
He is a writer of reckless ambition and one of the few serious novelists that most people have heard of. Yet he wins no prizes and literary London is split over him. Jason Cowley visits Amis and...