Bad Blood: Why does Canada still reject queer and immigrant blood?
/An interview with professor OmiSoore Dryden.
Read MoreAn interview with professor OmiSoore Dryden.
Read MoreCanada remains the only country in the world to legislate Indigenous identity on the concept of blood quantum.
Read MoreAmong my cousins, to eat dinuguan— a blood stew we called "chocolate meat" — was to win a dare, not to savour a favourite dish.
Read MoreSaying goodbye, in three languages.
Read MoreImages from an archival project by Toronto-based photographer and collector Zun Lee.
Read MoreKnown as qurbani or aqiqa, taking the life of an animal is a gesture of thanks to a higher power for providing bounty in one’s life.
Read MoreThe billion dollar pharmaceutical industry requires the bodies of low-income wage earners, debt-ridden students, and immigrants.
Read MoreIt seems funny that, by virtue of sharing the same blood, my father's other child and I should have anything in common.
Read MoreLaws against hate crimes are a deterrent, sure, but they also signal who Canada does—and doesn’t—consider worth protecting.
Read MorePeople from families created through adoption are living embodiments of the nature versus nurture debate.
Read MoreWhite people were only going to eat humble pie and knuckle bone until their fortunes changed. As soon as they could afford it again, they wanted steak.
Read MoreOn a generations-long taboo of menstruation and food preparation.
Read MoreThe Wellness Issue