Skip to content

From the archives

24 Sussex Dive

On some very late homework

City Limits

That shrinking feeling

The Grey Plateau

When the world stopped five years ago

Issues

May 2010

Sylvia Nickerson is an artist and illustrator and a PhD student at the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Toronto. Her illustrations have been published in the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, the National Post, The Globe and Mail and various magazines in the United States and Canada.

Fear-Driven Policy

Ottawa’s harsh new penal proposals won’t make us safer, just poorer—and less humane

Graham Stewart and Michael Jackson

Smart Bombs and Sex Robots

Is military technology driving the new hedonism?

Edward Shorter

The Climate Change Olympics

Perhaps some healthy provincial competition can get Canada moving

Mark Jaccard

A Billion Clips a Day

The clamorous mix on YouTube constitutes a genuine communications revolution

Geoff Pevere

Hunt for Meaning

The ambivalent pleasures of killing for sport

Ehor Boyanowsky

Lost Opportunity

A Canadian university almost gained the most important archaeological find of the 20th century

David P. Silcox

No Place Like Home

Despite grinding poverty, addiction and prostitution, Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is a genuine community

John Lorinc

Rescue or Kidnapping?

A provocative study makes us question the motives for international adoption

Suanne Kelman

A Gem Worth Waiting For

An Icelandic-Canadian novel appears in English after 110 years

David Arnason

A Towering Work of Fiction

Toronto’s most famous structure narrates a novel that aims high

Devyani Saltzman

Go Ask Alice

Lewis Carroll's classic passes through many artists' looking-glasses this season

Barbara Klunder

The Patriotic Executive

Alastair Gillespie recounts his struggle to reconcile nationalism with entrepreneurship

Stephen Azzi

Arrested Development

Two new biographies highlight the slow evolution of Canadian artistic taste

Judy Stoffman

The Elected and the Appointed

A fresh challenge to the supremacy of Canada’s courts

Philip Slayton