One of my first hookups post-breakup was with a man recalled in my carnal canon only as Peanut Butter Guy, because of the unexplained jar of peanut butter he had on his bedroom floor.
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For almost the entirety of my university career, the only constant in my love life — aside from proclaiming “I’m never downloading a dating app again!” and then doing exactly that — has been heartbreak.
Like many Gen-Z Queer masc people, Grindr has distorted my understanding of romance.
Deaf people were disproportionately impacted by the AIDS crisis, but community activism and communication technologies helped organize against it.
On the evening of February 4, the UBC Visual Arts Student Association (VASA) opened its annual undergraduate exhibition, What Do We Know, with an event inviting artists and attendees to speak at the Hatch Art Gallery.
As I return to the inviting beiges and browns of Totem Park; I’m surrounded by the trees — tall, unwavering, and seemingly unchanged.
All jokes aside, the difficulty that prospective potters face in gaining access to that little studio in the Life Building basement has become something of a running gag among club members and public alike
On January 31, the Beyond Borders multimedia book club gathered at the UBC Global Lounge to watch music videos by change-makers in the Middle East.
The Wolves make their entrance onto the turf which carpets the Telus Studio Theatre to blaring girl power pop and strobe lights.
For the past few years, remote learning has accustomed us to business on top, party on the bottom attire.
Seventeen years ago, Kathleen Jayme was accepted into the UBC Film Production Program. This February, she’ll be returning as an award-winning filmmaker and the 2022/2023 Phil Lind Multicultural Artist in Residence.
Artist Jag Nagra recalls what life was like before she came out to her family.
Local organizations have numerous film screenings, concerts, and other events occurring throughout the month to celebrate and commemorate Black History Month. Here are a selection of events, on-campus and across the city, to add to your calendar.
It was my third time in Canada, but my first time flushed with inescapable dread.
All this to say that public art matters. It’s important, then, that any efforts at redesigning and expanding UBC give public art its due consideration in the planning process.