On Dismantling Settler Colonialism explores the shift from assimilation to genuine reconciliation, emphasizing the urgent need to create spaces where Indigenous peoples can self-govern, restore their lands, and live according to their own values and traditions.
Artificially Intelligent places humans at the centre of AI’s story, making a compelling case for the role we have yet to play in technology’s transformation of our world.
The Song of the Stars explores Anishinaabe teachings and scientific insights that allow us t o better understand the cosmos, deepen our connection to the Earth, and unravel the mystery of our place within the universe.
At the Limits of Care challenges dominant narratives around women and care through a blend of feminist sociological analyses and memoir.
The business of medicine increasingly prioritizes profits over people, leading to widespread patient harm and clinician burnout. This collection... Læs mere
Keep Talking, a comprehensive, contemporary introduction to the field of linguistic anthropology, highlights the work of Canadian scholars and offers students everywhere a new lens for understanding the relationship between language and culture.
This book establishes a history of attention to detail (rather than an amassing of details) to disrupt a teleological view of history that positions Europe as the principal protagonist in the story of detail.
Oscar Wilde’s Paris explores Wilde’s connection with the French capital from his rise to fame to his eventual exile and death, examining his self-fashioning in the city, its impact on his career, and his eventual absorption into Parisian cultural history.
A graphic anthology co-created by migration scholars and comics artists, Crossing Lines explores issues of displacement, identity, and community, offering nuanced perspectives amid rising anti-immigrant populism.
Written in Blood, by physician and author Brodie Ramin, draws on lessons from past disasters to argue that proactive, preventative strategies can reduce risks and help avert crises – in our personal lives, our organizations, and society at large.
The Many and the Few examines the improbable friendship between Francesco Guicciardini and Niccolò Machiavelli, and its impact on Guicciardini’s political thought.
This book explores the importance of contemporary Canadian literature as a kind of nuance-making machine in a world where we appear to be under constant observation.