Tag: Colin Mitchell

  • Editor-in-Chief: One Last Request

    Editor-in-Chief: One Last Request

    I’ve thought for a long time about what I wanted to say in my final article for The Athenaeum. I’ve debated between a tell-all, a sappy story about how I’ve grown as a person, or constructive criticism for the university as a whole.

    Instead I want my last article to leave you with one message as Editor-in-Chief: learn your history.

    Acadia’s history is one that needs to be taught. So much has happened since 1838 that our mediocre Wikipedia page doesn’t cover. We’re a unique institution and we’ve been through hell and high water. We’ve done great things and we’ve fucked up royally. Our tumultuous history with the Baptists, flirtations with a eugenicist and white supremacist, drive for a home for our students, and bold plans for the future are just examples of what has happened within our community.

    To most of the world we’re a small university in the middle of nowhere, Nova Scotia. Prospective students have no idea that our campus is steeped in history, culture, tradition, and an optimistic spirit that has pushed us so far forward.

    Acadia has been behind the times. We were not the first university in the British Empire to grant a woman a degree. We were not the first university in Canada to have African-Canadians graduate. We did not have a female president until 2003. We have very few professors of colour and only just hired indigenous and black student advisors. We have accrued debt over the years and are struggling to pay it off while avoiding tuition increases.

    Yet through all of the negative headlines there is a reason to have hope. I moved across the country to come to Acadia and I’ve since fallen in love with this institution. I love it because no matter who you are or where you’re from, you can come here and make a difference. If opportunities don’t exist, you can create them.

    The Acadia spirit is one based on struggle and perseverance. Our history is rich with examples of how the university has soldiered on when the odds were stacked against us.

    In 1852, Professor Isaac Chipman – an integral figure in the founding of Acadia and fundraising that made the university possible – drowned alongside most of his students near Blomindon. With a sizeable portion of the graduating class and the university’s most esteemed professor lost, many feared the university would close. But we persisted.

    In 1877, the first College Hall burned to the ground. Within months the town and university organized the Forward Movement to raise funds to build another. We persisted.

    In 1914, the War to End all Wars began. It took the lives of dozens of Acadia students and threw the university into disarray. But we persisted.

    In 1920, the second College Hall burned to the ground. It took with it priceless books, artifacts, and memorabilia of a powerful history. The next day we began asking around for donations and worked with the Rockefeller foundation to build a brand new University Hall reflective of our pride. We persisted.

    In 1945, World War II ended and Wolfville was flooded with more veterans than there were beds. The university entered a state of shock and struggled to adapt. We persisted.

    In 2008, President Gail Dinter-Gottlieb resigned after Acadia had taken on massive amounts of debt and suffered through two faculty strikes. The university was being attacked from all sides as enrolment fell 25%. Within two years Ray Ivany became part of the Acadia family and helped put us back on our feet. We persisted.

    The same drive that built the first College Hall with no money, just the determination of its students, still courses through the veins of this campus. I’m proud to say that I’ve attended Acadia University. We’re not Harvard. We’re not Oxford. We’re not U of T. We’re not Dalhousie. We’re Acadia and that damn well means something.

    This year as Editor-in-Chief I’ve tried my hardest to make known the stories that compose our campus. I’m proud to have published a Black History Month Issue and Research Issue and to have celebrated the voices on this campus. Those who agree and those who disagree make our collective voice stronger. What’s important is that we keep talking and remember where we came from. Though there may be those who strongly disagree with the direction The Athenaeum has taken this year, I am and will always be proud of it.

    In the end, The Athenaeum is nothing more than a record of what happened. It does not persist because of a magical institution and aggressive archivists that demand copies of the paper. It persists because we all have stories to share. We are merely custodians of history. Our history has taught us that we will always persist and we will triumph. I’m confident in my successor and the successors that follow her to maintain the mantle of custodians of our collective history. The Acadia history.

    Thank you, Acadia.

    Remember: learn your history.

    Colin Mitchell is a fourth year (Honours) Politics student and Editor-in-Chief of The Athenaeum

  • Summer Reading List: Macrostrategy and Microstupidity

    Summer Reading List: Macrostrategy and Microstupidity

    More often than not, summer is a time for students to recharge before a strenuous academic year. Summer’s also a time to catch up on the world and engage in some mindless fun. Of all the things I’ve watched, I figure one movie, one book, one TV series, and one video game are a good way to unwind with some macro-level strategy and micro-level stupidity.

    Must Watch: Emmanuel Macron: Behind the Rise

    This movie chronicles the campaign of Jupiter himself, French President Emmanuel Macron. From his start as a low-ranking French cabinet minister to forsaking his party to start a new one, Macron is a textbook example of how youth can make a difference in politics. I always love seeing what’s going on behind the scenes in political campaigns- who makes which decisions, how photos for posters are chosen, the thought processes behind it all. It’s exhilarating and inspiring, perfect for a summer to kick-start your motivation. After all, if Macron was able to turn French politics upside down with his brand-new party, who says you can’t get ahead for next year’s courses?

    Must Read: Fifth Business, Robertson Davies (Toronto: Macmillan Canada, 1970)

    A personal favourite of mine, Robertson Davies’ Fifth Business is the only book I read in high school that I decided to read again. It’s a fascinating story of how one small moment between two friends in rural Ontario at the turn of the 20thcentury turns changes their lives forever. Dunstan Ramsay and his frenemy Percy Boyd Staunton get into an argument, leading Dunstan to throw a snowball at Percy. It misses and hits the pregnant wife of the small town’s minister in the back of the head, causing her to fall and prematurely go into labour. What follows is a truly mystical story, tracing the two through both World Wars and infusing spirituality, Freudian psychology, and Jungian archetypes into an encapsulating novel.

    Also Watch: Rick and Morty

    I have a tendency to take myself too seriously and Rick and Morty is the perfect antidote. Though the third season came out last summer, this is the kind of show you can easily re-watch at the end of a long day. Chronicling the interdimensional adventures of pre-pubescent Morty, alcoholic genius grandfather Rick, cripplingly insecure father Jerry, popularity-driven sister Summer, and fiercely independent mother Beth, this show takes the edge off of long days and injects some much-needed humour.

    Must Play: Sid Meier’s Civilization VI

    When I was in elementary school I bought Civilization IV at a Scholastic book fair because it looked cool. Nearly a decade later I’m still playing the Civilization series, with countless hours going into building my empire. Civilization VI is amazing because it allows you to take control of dozens of empires throughout Earth’s history. Civilizations like the Nubian, Zulu, Mongolian, Aztec, and British are at your disposal, each with their own perks. Balancing alliances with warmongering nations to understanding nuances like international trade, tourism, religion, culture, loyalty, nuclear weapons, and natural wonders makes for an exciting strategy game that you can easily spend hours on.

    Colin Mitchell is a 4th year Politics (Honours) student and Editor in Chief of The Athenaeum

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