S.H.A.R.E. the Health
By
Keanna Brown
and
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February 13, 2026
While the film only lasted thirteen minutes, S.H.A.R.E. led me to re-evaluate my own feminist ways.
Who Told You to Think Like That?
By
Madison Mäe Adsetts
and
·
January 5, 2026
How institutions script our voices, silence our instincts, and shape the questions we’re allowed to ask.
A Better Way to Talk About Crime
A Better Way to Talk About Crime
By
Alexia Kambanis
and
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March 16, 2021
In her second article of this series, Alexia Kambanis introduces a counter-example to her initial criticisms of local crime reporting: Arthur Newspaper! She explores how crime has been covered in Arthur's pages, and argues for crime reporting that accounts for context and empathy.
On Trent Land: An ED-ucation
On Trent Land: An ED-ucation
By
Francene Francis
and
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March 3, 2021
Francene Francis interviews Edward (Ed) Smith, of the Society for Ecological Restoration, a student group at Trent. They discuss his views on the recently approved Trent Lands and Nature Areas Plan, its environmental implications and what is says about Trent's future. Ed shares some of his environmental passions and the great work SER-TU has been up to in the past few years.
‘Video Killed the Radio Star?’ More like ‘The Network Killed the Lesbian Co-Star’
‘Video Killed the Radio Star?’ More like ‘The Network Killed the Lesbian Co-Star’
By
Aimée Anctil
and
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February 24, 2021
Aimee Anctil argues for the importance of high quality, complex, and realistic queer BIPOC representation in media. Pulling from shows like 'The Legend of Korra' and 'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power' Anctil underscores the impact queer BIPOC representation has had in her life. On the other hand, shows like 'The 100' and 'Riverdale' and basically everything produced by Netflix fail to give queer characters the story arcs they deserve. Tropes like bury your queers and queer-coding evil characters are harmful; “Children internalize it all, regardless of if they are aware of it or not.” Stay critical, Anctil implores, and demand better from the networks.
Screen & Souls
Screen & Souls
By
Madison Mäe Adsetts
and
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November 11, 2025
A plea for wonder in a world that has mistaken data for divinity.
The Death of the Filler Episode
The Death of the Filler Episode
By
Indigo Moran
and
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October 16, 2025
The disappearance of dead-end plots is symptomatic of a new age of TV writing.
Promises and Precarity: How Canadian Policy and Trent's Budget Strategy Exploit International Students
Promises and Precarity: How Canadian Policy and Trent's Budget Strategy Exploit International Students
By
Emma Rivero-Uribe
and
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August 19, 2025
An examination of how Canadian immigration policy and Trent University’s budget strategy place international students in financially and legally precarious positions
U.S. Isolation and the Coalition of the Willing
U.S. Isolation and the Coalition of the Willing
By
J.A. Forrester
and
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March 1, 2025
"America First" is the present refrain of the dogmatic American right wing, but from where exactly did this mantra arise? James Forrester details a history of U.S. exceptionalism which has seen the country further its own agenda while making the rest of the world pay.
Innocence Abroad ...The Americans are coming, the Americans are coming!
Innocence Abroad ...The Americans are coming, the Americans are coming!
By
J.A. Forrester
and
·
February 13, 2025
A simple question: Is the United States a global empire in the colonial tradition?
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There Goes Bonnerworth—My Pickleball Nightmare
There Goes Bonnerworth—My Pickleball Nightmare
By
James Cullingham
and
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January 7, 2025
Contributor and historian James Cullingham ruminates on the ongoing development of Bonnerworth Park and the ways in which Peterborough's prioritizing of pickleball parallels matters of provincial policy.
Life and Death on Faryon Bridge
Life and Death on Faryon Bridge
By
Louanne Morin
and
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December 4, 2024
How do we pass by the names of murdered children inscribed on Faryon bridge every day with such ease? Louanne Morin grapples with what it means not to grieve the dead that surround us.