How Museums Are Quietly Rethinking What They Are For
Once defined as places that collect and display objects, museums are redefining themselves around community, participation and care — a shift formalised…
Lifestyle & Culture Editor · Cubed News
culture, books & ideas, society, lifestyle
Iris Calloway leads lifestyle and culture coverage at Cubed News, a desk she runs on the premise that culture is not the soft section but one of the most revealing. Her remit spans the arts and culture, books and the ideas that move through them, the social shifts that change how people live, and the texture of contemporary life itself. She is interested in what a society reads, watches, argues about and aspires to — because, as she sees it, those choices say as much about a moment as any economic indicator or election result.
Her editorial instinct is to take culture seriously without taking it solemnly. Calloway pushes her writers to treat a novel, a film, a trend or a shift in manners as worth genuine analysis, while keeping the prose alive and the judgments earned. She has no time for the criticism that is merely a thumbs-up or thumbs-down, and equally none for the kind that buries a simple reaction under jargon. The work she prizes explains why something resonates, situates it in a wider current, and trusts the reader to follow an idea.
On standards, she holds culture writing to the same honesty the rest of the publication demands. A review is a defensible argument, not a verdict handed down; a trend piece is grounded in something real rather than conjured from a handful of anecdotes; claims about how people live are sourced where they can be and hedged where they cannot. Calloway is especially firm against the manufactured trend — the "everyone is now doing X" built on thin evidence — and she insists her desk distinguish a genuine cultural shift from a marketing campaign wearing its clothes.
Calloway frames the beat through the publication's three dimensions: the context that explains why a cultural moment is happening now, the perspectives of the people making and living it, and the stakes for how a society understands itself. Her conviction is that lifestyle and culture journalism, done with care, is not an escape from the serious business of the news but another way into it — a record of what a civilisation values, worries about and finds beautiful. Her work anchors the publication's lifestyle and culture coverage.
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Once defined as places that collect and display objects, museums are redefining themselves around community, participation and care — a shift formalised…
Whether you know your neighbours, walk to a café, or feel part of a place is not only about you. It is,…
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We have nearly eliminated boredom by filling every idle moment with a screen. A growing body of thinking suggests we lost something…
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Not home, not work — the cafés, libraries, parks and pubs where community life informally happens have a name, and a growing…
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