Publishing in Canada 2021: Booksellers and Publishers Evolve and Adapt publishersweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publishersweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
VANCOUVER Bells at Anglican churches across Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands chimed 215 times Sunday, once for each child whose remains were recently found at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. “We need to start somewhere and we need to signify and signal something,” said Reverend Ross Bliss, vicar of Christ Church Cathedral in Vancouver. “(We need to) signal intent that, you know, we get that this is a horrible thing, this is an important thing and we are implicated. So we’re starting there.” Locals stopped in their steps or sat to listen as the chimes played at noon Sunday, after services.
How to talk to children about residential schools | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source infotel.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from infotel.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Art works use representation and abstraction as symbols for immigrant experience Representation and abstraction used as visual symbols for immigration by Chinese Canadian artist Nicholas Tay at the Massy Books Gallery.
Author of the article: Kevin Griffin
Publishing date: May 11, 2021 • 3 days ago • 3 minute read • Artist Nicholas Tay at his home in Vancouver on May 10. Tay s work is featured in the exhibition Amateur Cartography at the Massy Books Gallery in Chinatown. Photo by Arlen Redekop /PNG
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Interview with Indigenous Brilliance Issue 44.3 Editors
Tansi hello! We are so thrilled to share the development of the Indigenous Brilliance issue 44.3. Our commissioned artist appearing in the issue is Whess Harman, a Carrier Wit’at multidisciplinary artist, an interview with the brilliant Cheyenne Wyzzard-Jones, a Black Indigenous queer femme creative curator, and cover art from Ocean Hyland, artist and activist from the Tsleil-Waututh nation.
This issue is to hold space for Indigenous writers to tell their stories. Indigenous is used to refer broadly to peoples of long settlement and connection to specific lands who have been adversely affected by incursions by industrial economies, displacement, and settlement of their traditional territories by others. We acknowledge this is not limited to Turtle Island and the America’s, and welcome Indigenous experiences from around the globe, who share histories of European colonialism, genocide, enslavement, subjugation, resistance,