Happiness, The Kind That Lasts
Can happiness be achieved, or is it an attribute assigned at birth? Junior Articles Editor Mariam Tareen explores scientific research to find out.
Read MoreCan happiness be achieved, or is it an attribute assigned at birth? Junior Articles Editor Mariam Tareen explores scientific research to find out.
Read MoreFeatures Editor Sana Hussain wonders whose prerogative it is to dictate the meaning of a work of literature — the author’s or the reader’s.
Read MoreWhere the author, Articles Editor Ghausia Rashid Salam, negotiates sexual power plays in the arts.
Read MoreJunior Articles Editor Ghausia Rashid Salam takes to task the writers of mediocre romance, and subsequent fanfiction, and questions how much of an influence Disney-fied fairietales have on them.
Read MoreMusic Editor Joseph Moore makes his debut with a striking piece on artists who set out to make a statement, and are ignored in favor of those who sell out.
Read MoreThe Missing Slate’s Ghausia Rashid Salam tears through the Grimm fairytales, empowering the damsel in distress with television’s Once Upon a Time.
Read MoreAudrey Ryback writes of heroism in the face of possible imminent death in war-torn Syria…
Read MoreMuhammad Umar Memon writes about the literary significance of the red light district and underbelly of a country like Pakistan, beginning with the country’s controversial author Saadat Hasan Manto.
Read MoreMorality is difficult enough in life, but morality in literature spans a much richer tapestry writes Maria Amir.
Read MoreSana Hussain writes about the evolution of The Great Gatsby in cinema, ahead of the Baz Luhrmann release later this year.
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