When the commentators fall silent
How we are forced into a normative consumption of sports
How we are forced into a normative consumption of sports
Erin Lang’s music has a certain wistful charm about it; her songs contain echoes of an old music box rediscovered in one’s attic, or a… Read More »Vintage melodies
A look at Montreal’s only Haitian radio station
Dance has a difficult reputation to escape; it’s often thought of as a technically challenging, formally beautiful art form that hasn’t changed much since the… Read More »The familial jungle
October 1958 The Daily prints a feature from the magazine Justice criticizing southern U.S. states for failing to uphold a Supreme Court decision to integrate… Read More »A half-century of black issues at McGill, in Montreal, and in Canada
Quebec Human Rights Commission tribunals blocked by SPVM
Moving beyond kneejerk reactions in campus politics
“Socrates, is virtue teachable?” asks Meno. And so Plato’s Socratic dialogue, Meno, begins. Meno has, of course, been studied extensively. But rather than offering a… Read More »The theatrics of thought
The Daily’s Statement of Principles says: “We recognize that at present power is unevenly distributed, especially (but not solely) on the basis of gender, age,… Read More »The Daily’s silence on Iran
A piece // body peace by Sally Lin
Re: “Fight oppression with oppression!” | Letters | February 11
Though hip hop has been criticized for promoting misogyny and materialism, and for negatively influencing today’s youth, educators and community volunteers are finding uses for… Read More »Beats for books
Salons Femmes br@nchées are a proud tradition at Studio XX, Montreal’s bilingual, feminist digital art centre. These evening show-and-tells serve the studio’s mandate to facilitate… Read More »Techno feminism
Could anyone elucidate the origins of the SSMU “male/non-male” policy, whereas all General Assembly debate must alternate between male and non-male speakers? It’s equally laudable and… Read More »More binaries, por favor!
Ideology should not motivate funding allocations