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The Edinburgh Fringe festival is unaffected by the corporate ideals of consumerism and profit, says George Kerevan, who gives his view on why it should remain a vast artistic experiment powered by youthful ambition and enthusiasm. 

It’s festival time in Edinburgh again. Forget all the minor irritations: the incessant swarms of folk far younger than I’ll ever be again; the worry that you are bound to miss the best show, no matter how many events you squeeze in; the occasional run-in with some Metropolitan arse who thinks they are visiting the colonies; and the bar queue at Summerhall. But still, the festival is a reminder that life is not bounded by the neoliberal injunctions to work, consume and make a profit for greedy banks. For a brief few weeks I can pretend I’m not trapped in a post-Brexit Little England.... Keep reading on The National