Author: Christina
-
Published 2026-03-26 22:11
-
(3109 Reads)
Between 1870 and the late 1930s more than 100,000 children from orphanages and ‘homes’ in the British Isles were sent to ‘distribution homes’ in Canada where they were indentured as farm hands and servants to families in need of cheap labour. These little immigrants became known as ‘home children’.
Among them was Joseph Henry Hughes.
Author: Christina
-
Published 2026-03-24 14:24
-
(173 Reads)
Param des Arts proudly presents the 11th Edition of Montreal Natyanjali, a vibrant showcase of Indian classical dance.
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-11-21 17:00
-
(526 Reads)
10th Edition of the Annual Fair, Quebec Reads Saturday and Sunday, 6–7 December, 2025 celebrating Quebec’s English-language publishers and writers.
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-11-18 17:30
-
(481 Reads)
Adapted by Josa Maule; Directed by Daisy Thomas & Josa Maule
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-09-03 15:29
-
(2072 Reads)
NATIVE-IMMIGRANT: A personal journey into our home and native land tells the story of discovering that, as an immigrant, I have much more in common with First Nations. Immigrants are the Last Nations; together, we are the ongoing human flow of the displaced, the multicultural offspring of colonization.
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-03-18 11:07
-
(2696 Reads)
Marco Paolini: A Deep Map breaks new ground in the field of Italian political theatre by outlining the unique approach of one of Italy’s most celebrated playwrights, Marco Paolini, whose work has hitherto remained inaccessible to English-speaking audiences.
Author Cristina Perissinotto engages critically with art and politics in Italy specifically but also considers implications and relevance on a global scale.
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-03-16 10:44
-
(6396 Reads)
Author: Christina
-
Published 2025-01-15 11:16
-
(11843 Reads)
WALDENSONG SATURNALIA
Tribute to the Mythic Years
A Novel by A. D. Morvaye
Published by Prince Chameleon Press
Abandoned by her vast chaotic family, a young girl recreates them into legend. The novel is a fusion of memory and imagination, both humorous and dramatic. Shifting between Old Europe and the New World, it features the idiom of London’s East End, blending into the language of poetry and myth.
An excerpt from WALDENSONG SATURNALIA was short-listed for the Eastside Stories Competition, London, U.K.