“Athenaeum” is a latin word, derived from the name of the Greek goddess Athena. In its modern
 usage “Athenaeum” refers to a building where books and newspapers are stored, or
 alternatively, a “literary or scientific association” according to Merriam-Webster. The word is said
 to have first been coined in its modern usage in 1799. Sixty-one years later, in 1860, Acadia’s
 Athenaeum Literary Society was formed, and in 1874 they would start the Athenaeum Journal.
 Today known simply as the Athenaeum, it has been Acadia’s student newspaper for over
 one-hundred-and-fifty years, more or less.
If you were to look through old issues of the Ath (short for Athenaeum), which I had the
 privilege of doing while working with the archives team to create digital copies of them, you
 would come away with the conclusion that the Ath has an eclectic history. The early issues are
 formatted more like the digest magazines you walk past, and likely ignore, with small pages
 bunched together into little booklets of poetry, essays, and short fiction. This was the format of
 the Ath from its inception in 1874 through The First World War and heading into The Second
 World War. I began with issues from the 1930’s while I was working through the archives, and
 had the weird experience of reading an essay discussing Germany starting a war in Europe as
 something that could happen.
Post war the Ath transitioned to a weekly paper, and shifted towards focusing on current news in
 Canada and on Campus. Additionally, there was a growing selection of comic strips, including
 running titles that were part of the underground comic movement. This has evolved into the
 current status of the Ath where, especially after the 2020 pandemic, we post most of our
 material directly to our website. We also compile themed print editions once a year, or semester,
 depending on how the wind blows.
The purpose of this history is to answer a question you may be asking if you’re curious about
 writing for the Athenaeum; what are we looking for? The answer is we’re looking for pretty much
 everything. We’ve run local news, national news, global news, essays, short fiction, poetry,
 photography, comics and more. If you want to create it, and think people want to read it; we’d
 love to hear from you.
I believe that one of the most important aspects of the Ath within the Acadia community is
 serving as a place to make things for the sake of making them. Most of the people who write for
 us are involved in the arts, whether through their education or simply personal passion, and the
 Ath is an opportunity to write things without a grade attached. The Ath is a space to share your
 writing, and make something good for the sake of making something good. Sure, there are ways
 that if you angle it right the Ath could be a career boon, I’m definitely putting “Editor in Chief for
 The Athenaeum” on my resume, but I started working for the Ath because I wanted an outlet for
 my writing, drawing, and creativity. If you’re also looking for that, come swing by
 
 



