Canada
The Narwhal
- ‘Build, baby, build’: a guide to Canada’s Bill C-5
The feds are rushing to fast-track major projects, from pipelines and mines to housing and hospitals. Here’s everything you need to know about the One Canadian Economy Act
- Finding myself in blood, flesh, veins and bug bites — life at a hide camp for Two-Spirit Indigenous youth
It’s my first time tanning my own deer hide. At Niizh Manidook Hide Camp, I’ve learned to slow down, listen and be in relation while immersed in brains and skin
- Here’s what you need to know about Indigenous sovereignty
Indigenous sovereignty and Indigenous-led conservation are both crucial to Canada’s future — but they’re also widely misunderstood. We explain in our latest video
Rabble
The Walrus
- The “Buy Canadian” Movement Goes Almost as Far Back as Confederation
Ads, images, and ephemera from the country’s many attempts to assert itself The post The “Buy Canadian” Movement Goes Almost as Far Back as Confederation first appeared on The Walrus.
- When My Breakup Felt Worse than Death, I Turned to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Memories are torture. What if we could erase them? The post When My Breakup Felt Worse than Death, I Turned to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind first appeared on The Walrus.
- Weekly Quiz: Pretendians, Poor Policing, and the Plight of Performers
How closely have you been reading our online stories this past week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every Saturday. The post Weekly Quiz: Pretendians, Poor Policing, and the Plight of Performers first appeared on The Walrus.
- Canada’s Archives Are in Trouble—and So Is Its History
Years-long delays, archaic privacy laws, and chronic underfunding are threatening our national memory The post Canada’s Archives Are in Trouble—and So Is Its History first appeared on The Walrus.
- Small Press, Big Machines, and the Last Run of Canada’s Most Stubborn Publisher
From its shop in Nova Scotia, Gaspereau defied the industry for three decades The post Small Press, Big Machines, and the Last Run of Canada’s Most Stubborn Publisher first appeared on The Walrus.
Our Times
Hakai Magazine
- So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
We started Hakai Magazine over 10 years ago because the ocean and its coastlines needed a voice. No other outlet was exclusively covering issues at the interface of sea and land—or of the marine world in general. After all these ...
Alternatives Journal
- WHERE THE WILDWAYS ARE
With apologies to Max, the central character in Maurice Sendak’s 1963 classic Where The Wild Things Are, and his arduous journey “in and out of weeks and through a day and into the night of his very own room”, Alice the Moose puts his to shame. Alice left her home park in
- The Journey to 2071: An Earth Odyssey
Dear Reader, We are excited to present to you our third issue from 2021, “The Journey to 2071: An Earth Odyssey”. In this issue, we aim to mentally enter the year 2071, with the assumption that we made it to that point, and tell stories from our journeys to getting
- They Call It Worm. They Call It Lame. That’s Not Its Name.
“Move over murder hornets. A new insect has people bugging out,” begins a segment for evening news viewers across the country. The story continues, but most can’t help but pause and question what just came out of their television speakers. Murder hornets? Murder hornet has become the popularized name for