Next April and May the UK’s largest annual politics festival will return to South Yorkshire for its tenth year – and we want to hear your ideas and event submissions. For next year’s Festival of ...
New data seen exclusively by Now Then shows that the University of Sheffield (UoS) received even more money from companies that manufacture deadly weapons than had previously been thought, with ...
Part of one of the commissioned artworks for the Give Over exhibition. Nasha Cash Give Over is an Opus project that uses border abolition to reframe media reporting of refugees and immigration more ...
French writer-director Coralie Fargeat’s 2017 film Revenge is a bloody, squeamish experience which entertains throughout, and her latest film is no different. The Substance carries those same elements ...
Slowly but surely, Divorce have been building up a reputation both live and on record. May last year saw the release of four-track EP Get Mean, a more than useful vehicle for their first singles and a ...
At just over sixty minutes in length, David Litchfield’s One Hand Clapping is a brisk but boisterous snapshot of a band at their commercial, critical and creative peak. Recorded over the course of ...
Brewer Christie McIntosh is an employee representative on the new board. Mark Newton Photography. One of Sheffield’s longest-running and most popular breweries, which also owns one of the most ...
Sarah and Rosie, the co-founders of Juno Books. Food isn't just something we eat – it’s woven into the stories we tell, the lives we live and our cultures. From films to poetry to novels, food is ...
Independent, award-winning citizen journalism since 2008.
Traditional public health plans, which aim to map out how people can live longer and healthier lives in big cities like Sheffield, usually do two things. First, they focus on direct and immediate ...
Two former members of the Sheffield Race Equality Commission write in response to controversial comments from SADACCA manager Olivier Tsemo in a Now Then interview.
Back in May, we published an interview with SADACCA manager Olivier Tsemo in which he outlined his views on inequality and identity in Sheffield. The interview contained opinions that ran counter to ...