How Orientalist Art Serves as a Colonial Method of Control: Representations of Muslim Women in Ingres’ La Grande Odalisque (1814)

Written By Colin Parker Griffiths Edited By Hannah MacDonald Introduction  During the nineteenth century, a significant trend among male European artists was the creation of Orientalist paintings. This catalog of paintings greatly contributed to the European social imagination of the “East,” and worked to cultivate a shared perception of Islamic regimes as exotic and inferior. Orientalist art was thus used to manipulate the Western consciousness … Continue reading How Orientalist Art Serves as a Colonial Method of Control: Representations of Muslim Women in Ingres’ La Grande Odalisque (1814)

Poetry For October

Written By Sam Rabie Edited By Carmen Faria the Bodies artist statement –  The poem is set in a club, immersing readers in an atmosphere of untethered spirit, haze, and euphoria. It paints a picture of individuals moving together in rhythm, creating a unified energy—the bodies. The speaker, a girl, is absorbed in this scene and experiences a moment of enchantment or desire with another … Continue reading Poetry For October

Dharavi’s Redevelopment Project and its Disproportionate Impacts on Women

Written By Shoshana Iny Edited By Nora Malhi “Poor Little Rich Slum”.  In 2012, Indian writer Rashmi Bansal published a book with this title, described as an ode to the success stories of Dharavi’s civilians. Located in Mumbai, India, Dharavi was one of the largest slums in the world. Here, the buzz of lively economic activity juxtaposed children’s cries out for food – having no … Continue reading Dharavi’s Redevelopment Project and its Disproportionate Impacts on Women

“Same Rope you Climb up on, They’ll Hang you With”: How the Demand for Stereotypical Depictions of Black Masculinity Put Misogyny at the Forefront of Mainstream Hip Hop

Written By Morgan Delva Edited By Anya Labelle Introduction One of the most fundamental realities pertaining to hip hop is the genre’s inseparability from its roots in Black American culture as a radical tradition (Johnson, 2023; Sullivan, 2011). Given this fact, it is crucial to navigate conversations about the genre with this in mind, especially when trying to deconstruct the more problematic tendencies that often … Continue reading “Same Rope you Climb up on, They’ll Hang you With”: How the Demand for Stereotypical Depictions of Black Masculinity Put Misogyny at the Forefront of Mainstream Hip Hop

An Intersectional Analysis of Class Struggle and Social Inequality in Parasite

Written By Dina Asadi Edited By Carmen Faria Parasite narrates the class divisions among South Koreans from a perspective that portrays the struggles of its poor protagonists in contrast to the wealth and luxury enjoyed by the upper class. Following the journey of the Kim family as they become employed by the wealthy Park family, the film reveals how economic barriers limit social mobility and … Continue reading An Intersectional Analysis of Class Struggle and Social Inequality in Parasite

Deconstructing Degas: The Ballet, Brothel and Bath 

Written By Colin Parker Griffiths Edited By Aiya Hyslop-Healy Introduction  Examining Edgar Degas’s depictions of female subjects in his artworks provides a pragmatic way of analyzing the patriarchal gender relations and ideologies of nineteenth-century Paris. The works Dancers In Repose (1868), Resting (1876-1877), and The Tub (1886) demonstrate Degas’ underlying misogyny and illuminate the social conditions of the time period characterized by men’s internal anxieties … Continue reading Deconstructing Degas: The Ballet, Brothel and Bath 

Denied pain, modern hysteria and treacherous drugs : a woman’s experience of medical gender biases 

Written By Sasha Lootvoet Edited By Lauren Bullock “By all that I hold highest, I promise my patients competence, integrity, candor, personal commitment to their best interest, compassion, and absolute discretion, and confidentiality within the law.”  We like to believe in the holiness of this oath. We want to trust that it never fails to bind those who pronounce it to our genuine interest and … Continue reading Denied pain, modern hysteria and treacherous drugs : a woman’s experience of medical gender biases 

Normalization of Disordered Eating Culture Among University Students

Written By Carly Rabie Edited By Jayda Smith We live in a culture where replacing meals with coffee, over-exercising, under-eating before consuming alcohol, and skipping meals altogether have become normalized and even praised in some circumstances. These practices and others like them fall under the umbrella of disordered eating. Disordered eating behaviours have become commonly practiced and promoted, creating a culture in which these behaviours … Continue reading Normalization of Disordered Eating Culture Among University Students

Militarized Masculinity: It’s Ideology, Purpose, Role, and Repercussion in Informing the Military Institution

Written By Josephine Metcalf Edited By Colin Parker Griffiths The armed forces of a nation are perhaps the most unique state institutions compared to other branches of a governmental system. Having almost exclusive access to weaponry is not the only reason for this distinction. Masculinity, as a guiding concept of gendered behavior and as a social value is utilized not only as a tool within … Continue reading Militarized Masculinity: It’s Ideology, Purpose, Role, and Repercussion in Informing the Military Institution

Girl Core

Written By Haley Clarke-Cousineau Edited By Aiya Hyslop-Healy Girl Core is a hybrid nonfiction essay imitating a young woman’s experience scrolling through Instagram reels on any given day. It explores the issues of having so much varying content tailored and presented to you in the span of less than six minutes. More specifically, it presents the sometimes overt, sometimes inconspicuous misogyny that permeates social media, … Continue reading Girl Core