Spring Archive
by Kevin Patterson
Everywhere Western ideas touch down, people get fatter. Urbanization is literally making us sick.
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by Jon Evans
As poverty’s historical enemy, technology will always defeat extremism.
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by Bruce Livesey
One man’s battle against CIBC exposes the billion-dollar scams behind our country’s “stable” financial sector.
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by George Murray
A selection from George Murray’s new book, Glimpse.
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by Elaine O'Connor
Sex tourism destroys the lives of millions of children every year, but activists are getting better at stopping Canadian predators in their tracks.
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by Christopher DeWolf
To fix a crumbling emblem, Montreal must think big once more.
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by Paul Gallant
When the Ontario government stopped funding Sex Reassignment Surgery, transsexuals panicked—then embraced the opportunity.
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by Dave Bidini
At a soccer tournament in Melbourne, a recovering drug addict and ex-soldier taught Dave Bidini that when you love the beautiful game, talent is optional.
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by Chantal Braganza
Nelson Symonds is a guitar legend few can name now. In his day, though, he earned the admiration of Davis, Coltrane and King.
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by Drew Nelles
Luddites moan the iPad, Kindle and other e-readers spell the death of books. The ongoing popularity of vinyl records proves otherwise: the best technologies stick around.
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by Dany Laferrière
150,000 people have already been laid to rest; 300,000 are injured; one and a half million homeless. The 2009 winner of the Prix Médicis tells the story of a people dealing with disaster.
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by Don Gillmor
A new short story by the author of Kanata.
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by Christopher Miller
Illuminating the bright-idea symbol.
by Rhea Tregebov
Three new poems
ISSUE 43
Tenth Anniversary: Spring 2012
online content:
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by Paul Gettlich
What really happened at Occupy Toronto?
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by Christopher Szabla
Occupy and the Arab Spring are often glowingly compared to the decentralized, democratic internet. But that very similarity may have doomed these movements from the beginning.
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by Maisonneuve Staff
A decade of Maisonneuve.
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also in this issue:
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by Tim Falconer
How can someone who passionately loves music also be a terrible singer? Tim Falconer takes up voice lessons—and discovers the surprising science of tone deafness.
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by Deni Y. Béchard
As a teenager, Deni Y. Béchard went to Vancouver to live with his father, an ex-con with a penchant for telling tall tales. He met a man desperate to forget the past.
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by Johanna Skibsrud
"She felt a great sadness. She would remember next to nothing of this, even soon."
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[see full issue contents]