McGill Tribune Vol. 38 Issue 5

Page 1

The McGill Tribune WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2018 | VOL. 38 | ISSUE 5

Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University

McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE

EDITORIAL

FEATURE

CONVERSATION

So long, Marie-Anne: Gentrification’s impact in the Plateau

This will not blow over

In conversation with Casey Auerbach

PG. 5

PGs. 8-9

PG. 15

(Leanne Young / The McGill Tribune)

Lawsuit in Institute of Islamic Studies causes leadership crisis

PG. 3

‘Don’t Read the Comments’ breaks the silence surrounding the complexities of sexual asssault Demaris Oxman Contributor Today’s climate – at McGill and worldwide – has drawn widespread attention to the prevalence of sexual violence. These

discussions lead to people questioning what exactly constitutes sexual assault. Produced by the Office for Sexual Violence Response, Support and Education (OSVRSE) as part of their Consent Campaign, Don’t Read the Comments delves into these grey areas of consent, forcing its audience to engage with

Saving the Farine Five Roses sign

Art project highlights Farine Five Roses sign in Montrealers’ collective memory Leyla Moy Contributor Since 1948, the glowing Farine Five Roses sign has been a fixture of the Montreal skyline: A series of neon letters that greets cars approaching from the Southwest District. What began as a simple advertisement for Ogilvie flour, later Five Roses, has become a prominent part of Montreal’s iconography and one of its most treasured

landmarks. The sign spotlights the forgotten industrial past of the district surrounding the Lachine canal, which, at one point, held the largest concentration of industrial buildings in Canada. At the same time, the sign has been the subject of hundreds of photographs taken by tourists and locals alike and has become a Montreal landmark. An ongoing art project by Concordia Communications Professor Matt Soar and

his collaborators highlights the past and present of this enduring city icon. Throughout its existence, the sign has gone through just two major changes, no small feat considering the heft of the 15-foot steel letters. After Quebec’s Bill 101 passed in 1977, limiting non-French words on signage across the province, owners eliminated the English translation ‘Flour’ formerly placed below ‘Farine / Five Roses.’ PG. 11

issues of such violence. The show takes place in the format of a television talk show titled Don’t Read the Comments, with playgoers acting as the studio audience. The show’s host Wendy (Dakota Jamal Wellman) introduces her three expert panelists: Grace (Joy Ross-Jones),

Trip (Gabe Maharjan), and Cindy Nancy Cindy (Cara Krisman), the topic of the day: “Are there grey areas of sexual consent?” The four characters are played in the bouffon style, a French form of clown theatre focusing on mockery and the reflection of a twisted society. PG. 7

Identity crises and queer history months Jacob Sailer Contributor October is Queer History Month at McGill, the first event of its kind at a Canadian university. It aims to explore and expand on the boundaries of heteronormativity through educational initiatives and celebrations: A four-week tangle in the complex web of queer identity. I came into my own sexuality with an unusual sense of animosity toward events

like pride parades and queer history months. My identity felt pigeonholed by events like pride, walled in by the confines of what constitutes ‘gay pride’. I’m gay. At least, I think I am. I’ll say queer for now— I’m young. I haven’t told my parents. They are two of the most loving and accepting people I have ever met, but I never got around to telling them. I assume they know: We fly a pride flag on our deck year-round. I probably would have taken it down

myself were I three or four years younger and carrying the same weight of self-doubt and anxiety. I am forever conscious of being ‘gay enough,’ a phrase that I drag around like a ball-and-chain of internal insecurities. When I came out to my best friend in eighth grade, she didn’t believe me. It seemed that all the boys around me neatly fit into a category, while I was neither gay enough, masculine enough, nor proud enough. PG. 6


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
McGill Tribune Vol. 38 Issue 5 by The Tribune - Issuu