The Independent Student Newspaper of the University of Toronto Mississauga since 1974
Issue 22 Volume 49
March 20 2023
themedium.ca
AESTHETIC NOTES
ELLYN WALKER
NATALIE EMIDIO
I need space to map out my thoughts, draw connections, and create salient visual cues to help me recall these relationships later. And while individual note-taking styles vary like fingerprints, studies show that creative personalizations can improve memory.
Even though the class was held on Zoom, the passion Professor Walker had for curating was palpable through the screen. Inspired by her radical thinking that strayed from tradition, I made sure to take her fourth-year seminar courses.
With her love for jazz and hip-hop music, artists such as Britney Spears, Julianne Hough, Stephen “tWitch” Boss, and the Royal Family dance crew became early inspirations that set Emidio off on her dance journey.
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NEWS
Strengthening Indigenous ties: UTM’s first-ever AllNations Powwow Mashiyat Ahmed Staff Writer
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n March 25, 2023, the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM), in partnership with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, will be hosting its first-ever All-Nations Powwow. The event is open to all students and staff, and is a significant step towards the inclusion of diverse cultural celebrations and the deepening of connections with Indigenous community members. A powwow is an Indigenous social celebration where community members gather and enjoy traditional singing, dancing, and art. SAMIRA KARIMOVA/THE MEDIUM
>> POWWOW continues on page 02
ARTS
FEATURES
Love Island UK 2023: The trials and tribulations of being a sexy single
Lecture Me! Refugee women’s experiences with technology shock
Elizabeth Provost, Daanish Alvi, and Bilaal Mohamed Editor-in-Chief, Staff Writer, and Contributor Spoiler Warning: Article mentions winners of Love Island UK, Season 9.
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ove Island UK is a reality dating TV show that follows a group of single people who move to a luxury villa, away from civilization, to find love. Throughout the show, unannounced added contestants, called “bombshells,” test the islander’s relationships—along with kissing challenges and re-couplings. A £50,000 cash prize is awarded to the couple who wins the votes of the public in the final round—viewers also play an active role in deciding the fate of pairs during the season. Throughout the season, the Love Island couples test their viability with a four- to five-day retreat to Casa Amor, where the boys and girls are separated and introduced to new bombshells. This experience culminates in an explosive recoupling, where the girls return to the villa—either alone or with a new arm candy—to see if their love interest has stayed loyal. After three months of witnessing 18 singles (each with the emotional intelligence of a squirrel) try to find their soulmates in the villa (which isn’t even on an island by the way), we thought the best way to summarize our viewing experience was to provide a backstory of the four couples that made it to the finals. >> LOVE ISLAND UK continues on page 14
Olga Fedossenko Associate Features Editor
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magine you arrive in a new country, and you do not have your phone. You cannot call or text anyone, you cannot search up the route to your hotel or Airbnb, and you cannot translate how to ask the locals where the nearest bus stop is. Many refugees feel lost and cut off from all technology upon their arrival to their countries of asylum. Many do not even know how to use the technology presented to them during their resettlement. Women in particular face a number of problems when learning to navigate unfamiliar technology in a new country with an unknown language. A refugee is a legal term defined by the United Nations Refugee Agency as someone unable or unwilling to return to their country of origin from fear of prosecution “for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion.” Professor Negin Dahya, from the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information, and Technology, has carried out research concerning the technologies accessible through refugee service providers. She explored women’s experiences
navigating technology shock when migrating to the United States. “We often hear people talk about refugees as a homogenous group, and that is very much inaccurate. Women who experience forced migration are often overlooked as a distinct category within the refugee group,” notes Professor Dahya. Her research seeks to create policies to help refugee women adjust more easily to the innovative technologies in their new countries. When Professor Dahya talks about technology, she does not just mean mobile phones, computers, and the internet. She mentions that technology also includes home appliances like sewing machines, laundry machines, and dishwashers that women struggle with when settling in a new place. One of the refugee women she met during her research said she faced a problem using a dryer for the first time. “At first, I didn’t understand how to use the dryer at all. My friend came to me and said: ‘What kind of a greasy layer do you have here [talking about the lint trap]? And I said: ‘How do I know that it has to be cleaned? This is my first time using it,’” shared the woman. Unlike the men, throughout resettlement, women have less opportunity to brush up on their English skills. >> LECTURE ME! continues on page 11