First the Press, Then the Streets

In the early 1900s, Spain was at the forefront of the largest anarchist movement in history. According to James Yeoman, it would not have been possible without the underground press.

Call for Submissions: Vermin

Vermin seeking “Against Pleasure” submissions by May 10th.

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Latest Posts

Canadian Internet Radio Take-over

Indie Love Radio By Melissa Bessey When we think of Canadian independent music, visions of unknown garage bands and seedy […]

Indie Lit Makes It Big in Hungary

By Richard Rosenbaum Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and the resulting chaos across Eastern […]

Toronto Free Library

By Norah Franklin This summer, curators Maiko Tanaka and Sarah Todd will explore the familiar institution of the library within […]

Zoe Whittall

By Shannon Webb-Campbell Rugby made poet Tanya Davis gay. Anne-Marie MacDonald fell on her knees. Anna Camilleri became a red […]

E-Publishers

The future of printed matter is looking more and more like a computer screen, but that doesn’t necessarily mean progress […]

The Bloody Matriarch

Visual and performance artist Jesika Joy opens up about spirituality, feminism, dead animals and their relationship to her work By […]

Mariko Tamaki Shows Some Skim

The author bares all in her new graphic novel By Erin Kobayashi Looking at writer Mariko Tamaki is like staring […]

Wey-hey and Up She Rises

Land-locked prairie poets bring the sea to the heartland By Andrew Wedderburn Booty, a collaborative pirate burlesque performance poem by […]

Autobiographic

Graphic novels often moonlight as memoirs. David Silverberg investigates why this is, and whether it makes for compelling reading or […]