• Spring 2026

    Welcome to the latest issue, which includes John Alderdice on biographies of John Hume and David Trimble, a new poem from Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Stefan Collini on James Bryce’s once great reputation, Quassim Cassam on bullshit, Lynsey Black on Presbyterian piety and promiscuity, Lori Allen on the plight of Palestinians and other strangers, Eoin O’Malley on the enigma of Leo Varadkar, Ruby Eastwood on the young Virginia Woolf, Maurice Earls on the rise, fall and possible revival of Irish Catholicism, our new Rereadings series featuring Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind and more.

    The publication of our Spring issue marks the launch of the drb’s new website. Among its features are a more powerful search facility, better archive layout, and improved mobile-friendly viewing on smartphones and tablets. Further enhancements to the website are planned, all with the aim of making the drb an enjoyable online reading experience.

    This is the first of four issues coming out this year. Each season will bring a new drb issue offering original, engaging copy on a broad range of themes from the arts and imaginative literature to history, politics and ideas. Blogs will continue to be published between issues, as reflected in the most recent series of blogs published on April 29.

    The next issue of the drb is due out in early June and will include Edna Longley on Seamus Heaney, Luke Gibbons on John McGahern, a new poem by James Harpur, and Ruth Harris looking back at her awarding-winning history of the Dreyfus affair, discovering new and fascinating parallels with our times.

Latest Blogs

  • For the Little People

    Enda O’Doherty

    Enda O’Doherty writes: Populists claim they represent the views of ‘ordinary people’, ignored by out-of-touch, ‘cosmopolitan’ political elites. But their methods of communicating with this segment of society are laden with calculation and condescension.

    Read More
  • Fleeing the Russian State

     Alexander Obolonsky

    Alexander Obolonsky writes: Russia has something positive to present – both to itself and to the world. Alongside the dominant culture of subjugation, an alternative counter-culture of resistance has always existed and survived, even in the darkest times.

    Read More
  • Dropping the mask

    Andy Storey

    Andy Storey writes: the old, better-managed order mourned by the writers in Foreign Affairs was no less violent and exploitative than Trump’s grotesque carnival of hustle and hubris.

    Read More

In This Issue

From The Blog

For the Little People

Enda O’Doherty writes: Populists claim they represent the views of ‘ordinary people’, ignored by out-of-touch, ‘cosmopolitan’ political elites. But their methods of communicating with this segment of society are laden with calculation and condescension.

Fleeing the Russian State

Alexander Obolonsky writes: Russia has something positive to present – both to itself and to the world. Alongside the dominant culture of subjugation, an alternative counter-culture of resistance has always existed and survived, even in the darkest times.

Dropping the mask

Andy Storey writes: the old, better-managed order mourned by the writers in Foreign Affairs was no less violent and exploitative than Trump’s grotesque carnival of hustle and hubris.

Reasoning Animals

Stephen O’Neill writes: What is stopping a conversation about a United Ireland which doesn’t knowingly inhabit the same structures that it seeks to replace, or repeat the same cliches and reinscribe the same privileges that those structures have perpetuated?

The Berlin Fringe?

Maurice Fitzpatrick writes: The fiasco marring this year’s Berlin Film Festival shows once again that the most vital art does not emerge from approval but thrives on the margins. A lesson the BFF needs to (re)learn.

Evidence of fullness

Ciarán O’Rourke writes: On the evidence of his work to date, Martin Dyar might be thought of as an able, and often savagely funny, dramatist of the universal human parish.