The Blue Hour, her new podcast, marries academia with art.
Latest articles from Shanai Tanwar
The year 2019 comes with fresher news than just another transit delay, as Ono secures #40 on the Vancouver Magazine’s 2019 Power 50 List.
Most of the popular discourse surrounding the climate crisis comes from the media giants and colonial interests whose we’ve always heard from, but do those conversations sound different from people of different marginalized groups?
The Indigenous AMS Council seat, passed earlier this year, is a step forward in extending the involvement of Indigenous students at the university level.
With most faculties transitioning to predominantly online classes and with a significant amount of the campus population away, what will become of clubs in quarantine?
COVID-19 challenged the way everything occupies space. For the Hatch, AMS’ student-run art gallery, navigating the running of an art gallery in light of physical distancing restrictions means determining how exhibitions and collections could be displayed in a distant manner, whether in person or virtually.
While copper is a known antibacterial agent, experts raised concern over the masks structure and price point.
This year, the Poetry in Transit project celebrated its 24th year since its inception in 1996. Each year, a collection of works by BC authors and Canadian published poets makes its way through a selection process to find itself into transit.
Dr. Benjamin Cheung, a psychology lecturer, announced in a tweet that he would be ending classes a week early for all his students.
The Indigenous meet-and-greet — held for the past two AMS election cycles to give Indigenous students the opportunity to converse with candidates — has been cancelled this year.
How does one adapt to the Blundstones and Patagonia fashions that Vancouver is known for?
roar for the parts of you / that go unsold
“i dip my feet / and paint my nails / in your ocean of misogyny”
The Cloud Innovation Centre collaboration, originally announced on July 10, 2019, received pushback at the time from students and faculty who expressed concerns about Amazon’s track record.
Following International Women’s Month, UBC students shared their experiences on campus, their passions and what safety means to them.