I am very excited to announce the release of a new zine! Community, Empowerment, Social Change, and Zines: Wasted Ink Zine Distro Wasted Ink Zine Distro (WIZD) is a community hub for zines, education, and social activism. WIZD is an organization that uses zines to connect individuals to a community that empowers them to makeContinue reading “Community, Empowerment, Social Change, and Zines: Wasted Ink Zine Distro”
Author Archives: Sage Pantony
Zines as Empowering Adult Education Tools: A Presentation Zine
How can we use zines in adult education to empower learners to make social change? In this zine, I examine a political activism zine by Kyle Tran Myhre through the lens of this question. The slides within are originally from a presentation I gave in one of my education classes, which I’m proud of andContinue reading “Zines as Empowering Adult Education Tools: A Presentation Zine”
The Educational Power of Zines: On Making Academic Research More Accessible Through Zine Making and Reading
Finally, after a two-year hiatus, I am releasing a new zine!!! Hi, I’m Sage, a zinester and graduate student studying education. I have done a lot of academic and non-academic writing in my life. I believe in bridging the two, especially in making academic writing more accessible to people outside of academia. Zines are anContinue reading “The Educational Power of Zines: On Making Academic Research More Accessible Through Zine Making and Reading”
Belated fall poem
The mountain gradually turns orange and burns away Like last summer’s sun Winter comes Or will come And likely, I’ll still be sitting at this desk Forgetting that leaves exist Turning the heat up and down Watching my neighbour clean her window Feeling the seasons change outside of me
Hello again
How lucky to have a view like this in the heart of the city. Two and a half years since I came here and climbed this mountain. I was careful on its icy paths then. People ask why I came to Montréal. I was following a dream. But then, of course, life here became aContinue reading “Hello again”