Two Truths and a Lie “The game seems simple—until you realize most people don’t have interesting facts about themselves stored away for when a whimsical get-to-know-you game erupts. Though our class was made up of aspiring writers, we seemed to forget our imaginations entirely within the constraints of the exercise. Instead, we relied on safe, sanitized facts that didn’t reveal anything about us as people, but increased our chances of ‘winning’ the game.” Alicia Elliott – The Puritan – November 2018 Advertisement
The Strange Case of CanLit’s Disappeared Black Poet “The only mention of Philip I have been able to find in relation to Hamadeh’s work is a Visitor’s Guide to the museum where the installation was being held, which makes passing reference to Philip and to the historical Zong massacre but not in reference to each other. But out of the many interviews Hamadeh has done, none link her work with Philip or speak of the exhaustive archival research Philip has done to bring the legal case of the Zong massacre back into our contemporary imaginary. This is not only a glaring critical blindness—it is unbelievable, given how much Zong! is studied, critiqued, and written about, that anyone speaking critically about this work would not bring up Philip’s name or her work—it also indicates a greater act of erasure and appropriation.” Kate Siklosi – The Puritan – August 2018