If it were not for the deeply colonial legacies embedded in the practice of archaeology, it might be tempting at first pass to say that Ahmad Danny Ramadan’s newest publication is a fundamentally archeological endeavour.
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Camp gives Queer people encouragement, according to Velour. Encouragement to “press on, in spite of judgment, or maybe even because of it.”
What if I told you there’s an easy way to double your wardrobe in size, while also weaving threads of friendship with your roommates?
somehow there is always an emily
how can you love someone without craving / their insides?
Though many early passions have yielded to time and growth, my adolescent love for rom-coms appears to have weathered the storm.
There is something so inherently sapphic about making a playlist.
In the early 1900s, a clockmaker’s wife plans to meet up with her lovers while her husband is out of the house. Hijinks ensue and both lovers end up stuck inside clocks, forced to somehow make their escape without the clockmaker catching on to his wife’s agenda.
i only ever practice religion when i need the universe to act in my favour.
In 1994, Kris Mitchell of Smak, Gilles Zolty of Zolty Cracker and their respective bands got rejected from Music West. The festival was one of the loudest in Vancouver, at one point bringing together over 300 local acts.
It’s crazy how much joy a needle, a piece of cloth and some thread can bring a 21-year-old girl.
How It Works Out needs a reader who understands that love isn’t always pretty — that attraction can strip someone down to their most raw and animalistic state.
In the AMS Nest’s sustainability corridor, a new mural by UBC students Josianne Assignon and Ana Julia Leon showcases how rising sea levels might appear at UBC. The artists unpacked their work at the mural's launch on May 22, hosted at the CIRS Policy Labs.
This year’s national Asian Heritage Month theme is “Preserving the Past, Embracing the Future: Amplifying Asian Canadian Legacy.” As the month comes to an end, we’ve reflected on how people celebrate and connect to their backgrounds.
Ambiguity, silence and the unsaid — for poet-translator and UBC creative writing MFA graduate Yilin Wang, these are themes that can tug at a writer’s inspiration to delve into their craft.