The pandemic has been racialized, increasing the violence and verbal abuse toward Asian-Americans; women especially, according to the Stop AAPI report released Tuesday, are 2.3 times more likely to be a victim of a hate crime. This statistic was demonstrated the same day as the report by the racially motivated murders of 8 people, including … Continue reading A Hate Crime: Growing Anti-Asian Violence in the US
Analyzing Munch’s Vampire
Vampire, Edvard Munch’s famous painting, was a title assigned by a later interpretation, influencing the modern understanding of the art for over a century.
Psychoanalysts to Cribstone: A look at a small Maine Island
An island off Maine's coast offers unique historical attractions, with a surprising link to Jungian psychology.
A University’s Shaky Response to the Coronavirus
SCAD moved all HK classes to eLearning for the rest of the quarter due to coronavirus fears. We can’t talk about it.
Gambling on the American Dream: The struggle of Visa holders
SCAD represents 119 countries, many are in the U.S. on a visa and plan to work in the U.S.–a prospect that is becoming more unobtainable every year.
Hong Kong Protests: What Started it and Why It’s Still Going
Hong Kong has been in the throes of city-wide protests since June 9th. What started it? Why is it going on for so long? What is SCAD's response?
Can a Photographer Emotionally Charge a Photograph Through Intent?
Photography is not only an act of capturing images to document moments but emotionally driven work, reflective of the photographer’s subconscious.
What Now? The Future of Hong Kong Protests
For over two months, Hong Kong has stood at an impasse through millions of citizens protesting the fugitive extradition to China law–but the future of the protests seems uncertain.
The Police, Triads, and the Yuen Long Attacks: Fall of Hong Kong Revised
It is 11 pm. Splashes of blood decorate the floor and shrill yells fill the halls of the Western Rail Line in Yuen Long—the police are not there.
Hong Kong: Disappearing in Slow Motion
Hong Kong's cultural identity, democracy, and freedom of speech is under threat from the looming superpower touching its northern border.