Historical memory and the necessity of remembrance
The efforts of Latin American societies to remember periods of internal conflict speak to the region’s desire for national conciliation
Historical memory and the necessity of remembrance Read More »
The efforts of Latin American societies to remember periods of internal conflict speak to the region’s desire for national conciliation
Historical memory and the necessity of remembrance Read More »
The importance of uplifting the Palestinian narrative, from here onwards
To condemn colonialism: contextualising the Palestinian struggle Read More »
Victoria College’s dangerous relationship with the police
Scarlet, gold, and the thin blue line Read More »
The Strand: What year are you, and what are your majors? Sara Ciganovic: I’m in fourth year, and I’m doing a pathobiology specialist. What is your research? My lab studies how the brain develops and the stem cells that are creating the brain using mice models. We’ve done a lot of sequencing analysis on the
Scientists @ Vic: Sara Ciganovic Read More »
The ghosts of your past trauma might be the methylation patterns on your DNA (amongst other things)
Transgenerational imprints: The legacy of trauma and stress Read More »
Did time feel different during the COVID-19 lockdowns? Can you remember? Although the lockdowns that resulted from the global pandemic may have felt neverending as we trekked through our ‘new normal,’ it seems now that it swept past us in a confusing, jumbled-up blur. In order to determine what has caused recollections of the lockdown
Did the COVID-19 lockdowns warp our memories? Read More »
An interview with a Toronto creative on the effects of oversaturation and how this is redefining career success in creative industries
Is oversaturation in creative industries impacting the next generation of creatives? Read More »
Our obsession with recycling the past
The cycles of camera culture Read More »