Culture
The Walrus
Of Needlework and Nebulae
The otherworldly beading creations of Margaret Nazon
3 min |
April 2020
The Walrus
The Age of Surrender
When is a senior no longer capable of making their own decisions? It depends on whom you ask
10+ min |
April 2020
The Walrus
Vocal Range
Riit’s new album brings throat singing to the nightclub
8 min |
April 2020
The Walrus
The New Separatists
The roots of western alienation date back generations. Here’s why the latest secession movement looks different
10 min |
April 2020
The Walrus
A New Housing Model For Managing Mental Decline
A new housing model for managing mental decline
8 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
The Digital Afterlife
The ongoing legal battle to decide who owns our data after we die
10+ min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Anatomy Of A Pandemic
History has much to teach us about how to survive the COVID-19 outbreak. We need to listen to the lessons of the past
10+ min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Story Sellers
The expanding world of paid social media influencers
9 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Shelter Seekers
DEAR SCHOLARSHIP LIAISON OFFICER:
10+ min |
May 2020
The Walrus
SUMMER SERVICE
Every year, Sri Lankan Catholics from all over make a pilgrimage to Ontario’s cottage country
8 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Empty Nesters
First we bonded over our unusual pets. Then we bonded over butchering them
3 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Poetic Justice
Twenty-seven years after her death, Bronwen Wallace’s poetry feels newly relevant in the #MeToo era
8 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
A Dose of Dr. Zee
One man’s case for legalizing recreational drugs
10 min |
May 2020
The Walrus
Who Owns Colombia's Gold?
Mining operations have pitted a Canadian company against locals who have worked the mountains for generations.
4 min |
December 2019
The Walrus
WADA Mess
The World Anti-Doping Agency was created to fight against drugs in sports. But clean athletes say it is betraying them.
10+ min |
December 2019
The Walrus
The Sail And Scupper
Plympton, N.S. — Massive numbers of dead starfish, clams, lobsters, and mussels have washed up on a western Nova Scotia beach, compounding the mysterious deaths of tens of thousands of herring in the area. The Canadian Press. December 28, 2016.
9 min |
December 2019
The Walrus
The Making Of Margaret Atwood
Fame is not new to Margaret Atwood — it’s a by-product of life as a perennially prizewinning, bestselling author.
10+ min |
December 2019
The Walrus
Small Towns, Big Hopes
Rural Quebec looks to newcomers to extend the life of shrinking villages
7 min |
December 2019
The Walrus
Not What The Doctor Ordered
The hidden costs of medical testing
7 min |
December 2019
The Walrus
Make The Verb Work
Before Elizabeth Smart’s poetry found its audience, the writer made her way by crafting the era’s most eloquent ads.
10+ min |
December 2019
The Walrus
We're Doomed. Now What?
An optimist’s guide to the climate crisis.
10+ min |
November 2019
The Walrus
Raptors Revolution
What the 2019 nba championship says about race and belonging
7 min |
November 2019
The Walrus
China's New Deserts
The lands around the Yellow River are turning to sand.
2 min |
November 2019
The Walrus
Hakyaxamik*
Growing up, I never knew two of my brothers — but I could picture them
3 min |
March 2018
The Walrus
System Update
Canadian courts lag so far behind in software and infrastructure, criminals are running free
5 min |
March 2018
The Walrus
Insult, Then Injury
Researchers are finding links between racial discrimination and long-term health
6 min |
March 2018
The Walrus
​Plot Twist
A new thriller reimagines the role of women in the genre
3 min |
April 2018
The Walrus
Styling The Senate
One of the most despised political institutions in Canada gets a new look
6 min |
June 2019
The Walrus
The Rise Of Junk
Science Fake publications are corrupting the world of research — and influencing real news
10+ min |
June 2019
The Walrus
Click Bait
In a campaign to protect sharks, a controversial research group is trying to disrupt traditional science
10+ min |
