Blog — ...hurting / too much to let anything be.” And so, through this memoir-poem, McIlwraith does not let anything be. She follows her family’s story by studying their language. McIlwraith is...
Blog — ...engage all of the community. And we need to ask our citizens to do more—they want to do more. It’s their society and they care about it. –Mary Pat MacKinnon...
Blog — ...Dialectics series How to Read Like You Mean It | April 2023 Kyle Conway “To read like you mean it is to find ways to live with other people, exploring...
Blog — ...version for you to add your own spin on it! Head over to the Remixer Machine to change the text, colours, and speed of those whirling x-ray specs. We played...
Blog — ...conceal or obliterate the fact that your victim is your fellow creature, a person like yourself. In turn, such anxiety is often so powerful that God needs to be called...
Blog — ...are pleased to be recognized for our high standards and commitment to great books. Thank you to Fred Stenson for hosting this event and to the Book Publishers Association of...
Blog — ...Frankenstein. The adaptations that McCutcheon draws on go beyond feature films to include the “allusive or ephemeral.” He uses the term “Frankenpheme” to capture these adaptations and we’re sharing our...
Blog — ...forward to a new catalogue season because it means we have the opportunity to learn something new—whether it’s the history of Vorkuta, the site of an infamous gulag in northern...
Blog — ...production is disrupted, and unemployment rates rise. Many countries are seeking to import large quantities of what used to be their largest export—corn. The resulting food insecurity has become a...
Blog — ...remain invisible until they’re communicated. And here’s where scholarly presses come in. If scholarly work is meant to improve society, then society needs to be able to use that work....