Vienna: How the City of Ideas Created the Modern World - A must-read account of Austrian capital’s impact
Richard Cockett’s tracing of how the Austrian capital has shaped western politics, economics and culture is essential reading
Richard Cockett’s tracing of how the Austrian capital has shaped western politics, economics and culture is essential reading
Freud’s Last Session, starring the Oscar-winning actor, will feature a replica of psychoanalyst’s famous couch
Many large employers have blanket no-dog policies despite wider shifts in attitudes
Unthinkable: We can all learn from psychotherapy, perhaps the best place to start is school
Patrick Freyne: That’s how I imagine him, anyhow. He’s almost as compelling as The Circle
Alex Winter on friendship with Keanu Reeves, the risky new film and the fun side of fame
US Politics: President’s materialism is in contrast to moral imperatives of his secretary of state
Post-coronavirus era will demand a radicalism the old parties are not trained for
Can we decarbonise the global economy? Will democracy die? Could Ireland unite?
Baby mortality: The evolution of how we deal with the sadness
Seeing power and submission at work in your life can give you a better balance
Scarlett Curtis on Saoirse Ronan, mental health and female activism
A new exhibition at the Irish Museum of Modern Art strips back to a primal force
Clock with face made from shark skin to be exhibited at RDS fair
The Twelfth weekend neatly illustrates Freud’s ‘narcissism of small differences’
Inspired by the loss of its home, Dublin Youth Theatre partners with Pan Pan to contemplate youth and adulthood in The Sleepwalkers
The insurance salesman could not speak English, only read it, and plans for a revised edition sank in a plane crash
Workers, particularly women, often feel guilty for failing to hit impossible targets
These unique artworks transform a living space. But do your homework before investing
Galway Cartoon Festival explores work inspired by the first World War armistice
Learning to still be a friend to yourself despite your imperfections is a vital skill
Work becomes really meaningful when it expresses your strengths, inspires your passion and is aligned with your values
Laura Kennedy: Finishing a thesis on theories of emotion makes you quite emotional
Rite and Reason: Moral theologian explored idea of being spiritual but not religious
David McGrane recalls his colourful career at the Grafton Street institution
Real-life clowns are protesting that Stephen King’s ‘It’ is killing their business. So why are they so often seen as evil?
The Hapsburg empire was a powerhouse of industry, science and technology, third in the world at the time only to the US and Germany
Virginia Reeves’s Man Booker-longlisted debut is eloquently written but on the dull side
The 50 pieces in Freud Project are invaluable opportunity to assess British painter’s work
'No beige', says Carleton Viney, who has been asked to redesign the next US ambassador's Phoenix Park residence
Northern Irish actor Colin Morgan gets to grips with spooky goings-on in this eerie BBC drama
How information cascades from memes into memories, crushing fact checkers
John Carney’s Sing Street strikes a chord as part of Hong Kong and Macau Irish Festival
American professor Martin Seligman has pioneered positive psychology, inverting the traditional focus of his profession
Although the writer’s literary experiments were utterly modern, they were haunted by ghosts, shadows and Irish legends
A fragmented narrative of childhood repressions shows the disturbed mind of a German judge
Churches in Norway may be largely empty and belief in God in steady decline but belief in, or at least fascination with, ghosts and spirits is surging
Displaced people will not return home for years. We must help them rebuild lives
‘There was some moaning about Dublin’s relatively unimpressive position’
Russian Bolsheviks and Indian nationalists among those inspired by seminal revolt
There are thousands of therapists out there, but it’s not easy to assess their qualifications, particularly in the throes of a crisis. Here’s our guide to finding help
Designer Rory O’Hanlon has worked with the cream of international fashion, and now the low-key Louth man is revamping a classic British brand
He’s mad and bad and it’s dangerous at his shows. Eric Davis tells Brian Boyd the secrets of Red Bastard’s success
‘Never write what you think people want to read. Write what is inside you and follow it through every time, because that’s where the essence of true writing comes to life’
Moncrieff, a unique radio host, is back on TV – a medium that never quite got him – with a quiz show. He talks work, children, feminism and his fears for society
A month-by-month cultural portrait of 1913 reveals a world that was about to change forever
How many ways are there to tell a fairy tale?
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices