
Presence, failure, and the ancestral remediation of sound
At the Decolonial Frequencies Festival, sonic utopias resonate outside the institutions.
Anna Bowen is a Guelph-based writer, poet, and editor. She works at ArtsEverywhere, Musagetes, and Publication Studio Guelph. She is former news editor at This Magazine and has an MA in Sociology and Equity Studies (now Social Justice Education) from OISE/University of Toronto.
At the Decolonial Frequencies Festival, sonic utopias resonate outside the institutions.
An interview with Derrais Carter about Black Revelry, a collection of ekphrastic writing describing Ernie Barnes’ iconic painting, The Sugar Shack.
The solidarity and affection of independent publishing networks As a child, I remember desperately wanting a journal with a magnetic seal like my friends had at the time. Our family’s
In a cafe near Templehof park in Berlin in the spring, Anna Bowen catches up with scholar and writer Simon(e) van Saarloos about their new book, Take Em Down: Scattered Monuments and Queer Forgetting.
Can a transcontinental flight create space for dialogue?
In a small Ontario town, the BLM movement responds to anti-Black racism in Canada. Local Black community leader Marva Wisdom weighs in.