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URP leaderboard April 2025

Culture

  • Sinéad O’Connor: Farewell to a fearless protest singer

    Singer Sinéad O’Connor was not of this world. She was an ethereal talent and fearless activist who existed beyond the margins of respectability and societal expectation. When she died last week at 56, she left behind an artistic and political legacy of struggle and courage against oppression and for the voices of the impoverished, abused, and forgotten people of the world.

  • The day the bubble burst: ‘Akira’ and Japan’s economic ‘miracle’

    Katsuhiro Otomo’s legendary anime film Akira (1988) celebrated its 35th anniversary on July 15, 2023. As CD film critic Kalden Dhatsenpa writes, we should remember the movie as a towering achievement of cinema, a cultural landmark depicting the turbulent economic and social history of Japan at the peak of “the biggest asset bubble in history.”

  • Then and now: the Asianadian and the radical spirit of community care

    The Asianadian was the first publication of its kind in Canada to host national and progressive conversations about the state of anti-Asian racism. Undertaken by a collective of cultural workers who found their way to Canada, the magazine offered dynamic approaches to discussing Canadian history while celebrating pan-Asian Canadian writing, music, and perspectives.

  • Russian liberalism’s false dawn

    Konstantin Bogomolov recently published an article denouncing his one-time ideological allies in Russia’s liberal intelligentsia for their attitude towards the Russian people and the war in Ukraine. Bogomolov was out to provoke, yet beneath its insulting rhetoric, his article contained a germ of truth about the prospects for Russia ever turning into a liberal democratic state.

  • The case for a (mostly) car-free world

    Canadians spend an average of 16 days per year driving. That’s a lot of inactive transportation, not to mention stress, traffic violence, and money. Despite this huge amount of driving, their cars sit parked, collectively taking up an immense amount of space, for the other 349 days—96 percent of the time. There is nothing inevitable about any of this.

  • Why we should abolish ‘Corporate Pride’ once and for all

    Corporate Pride is not about liberation but about keeping the potentially unruly in line. If Pride must maintain its corporate sponsorships, then I can only work to abolish it in the same vein as I work for police and prison abolition. This June I will be attending Abolition and Anti-Fascist Pride events for the second year in a row, where politics and a good party are intimate partners.

  • Cancelling a culture

    Fortunately for Russian society, the crusade against classical culture and history initiated by the authorities is being thwarted by everyday practice, which is dominated by completely different trends. In the Internet age, censorship is extremely inefficient. A kind of cultural war has unfolded, in which one’s state acts as an occupying force, and citizens resort to guerrilla tactics.

  • Woke imperialism

    There are amongst us genuine freedom fighters of all ethnicities and backgrounds whose integrity does not permit them to serve the system of inverted totalitarianism that has destroyed our democracy, impoverished the nation and perpetuated endless wars. Diversity when it serves the oppressed is an asset, but a con when it serves the oppressors.

  • The ‘Beyond Van Gogh Immersive Experience’: a sadness that lasts forever

    To speak of the healing qualities of art, nature, colour and beauty, is to miss the mark profoundly when displaying an artist whose experience of life was so unremittingly bleak. While art and colour may have brought meaning to van Gogh’s life, it offered little by way of solace. It takes a very adept capitalist sleight of hand to turn his story into a lesson on “healing.”

  • The case for smashing Big Alcohol and reclaiming working class joy

    Despite the ubiquity of a legal and safer supply of alcohol⁠, beverage alcohol contributes to the deaths of some three million people around the world every single year via traumatic injuries, chronic diseases, self-harm, cancers, and alcohol use disorders, including alcohol dependency. Countless more people live with alcohol-related diseases, chronic pains, mental health issues, and various disabilities.

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