On June 26, the Victoria Pride Parade wound its way through downtown. Around 140 groups participated in this year’s parade, part of the first in-person Victoria Pride Festival since 2019. Among those who joined the celebration of Pride Month were UVic Pride and the Gender Empowerment Centre (GEM).
Results for "sex and the city"
Sally Rooney returns to the spotlight, older, somewhat wiser, and infinitely more existential, with Beautiful World, Where Are You
But in our world of staggering housing prices, a static job market and an anxiety-inducing pandemic, her pessimistic tone has proven itself to be exactly what readers want.
UVSS elections: Meet the candidates vying for lead director positions
All but two candidates are...
The writing of Indigenous women, non-binary, and two-spirit folks as resistance and resilience
Graphic provided by the...
Affirming, reevaluating, and reimagining gender performance and identity in the time of COVID-19
Here we share six stories of people who have thought about their gender in different ways through COVID-19 and explore what gender means to them.
UVSS Campus Kick-Off provides a mixture of online and in-person entertainment
Favourites Bands on the Roof...
Inside UVic’s investigations of Vikes rowing coach Barney Williams, and the 60 alumni calls to re-conduct them
Williams is still coaching,...
The Existence Project aims to connect people and decrease stigma around homelessness
The Existence Project holds workshops for people to connect over their experiences with homelessness. At each workshop, a storyteller with lived experiences of homelessness narrates their story to a group of people, which deliberately includes students, artists, and public sector employees.
Vulvodynia: Why a condition that affects one in six North American women is ignored, under-researched, and underfunded
Though vulvodynia, chronic pain affecting the vulvar area, affects one in six North American women at some point in their lives, it receives disproportionately low funding, publicity, and research. Some health care providers urge optimism, but many people affected by vulvodynia are left coping with chronic pain with few resources or supports.