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Amanda Todd’s death by suicide—after her video disclosing bullying and harassment —creates a media tsunami

The death by suicide of Amanda Todd, who disclosed in a YouTube video the bullying and harassment she had been experiencing, created a tsunami of media attention. Social media—which was directly involved in her suffering—propelled her story to the front pages of local and national newspapers and websites around the world.

Martin Laba, an associate professor at Simon Fraser University specializing in media and pop culture analysis, told the Maple Ridge News he was surprised by the global impact of Todd’s story. “You’d have to have been living in a hole to have not heard about her story,” he said. “It truly went viral, and was particularly driven by social media.” (more…)

A national strategy to deal with bullying?

October 25th, 2012 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on A national strategy to deal with bullying?)

Dany Morin, Member of Parliament, asks for a response to bullying and harassment of children and youth in Canada

Calling the bullying of children and youth “a nation-wide problem,” N.D.P. Member of Parliament Dany Morin has been asking Canada’s government to take action on the problem for a year now. He has introduced a motion, which calls for a national strategy to prevent bullying; it was debated in the House of Commons just days after the high-profile death by suicide of Amanda Todd. (more…)

Linking bullying, depression, and suicide

October 25th, 2012 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Linking bullying, depression, and suicide)

Chaplain Diane Weber Bederman says Amanda Todd’s death was more about mental health than bullying

In the aftermath of the death by suicide of Amanda Todd, an avalanche of news reports, opinion articles, and social media postings focused on harassment, bullying, violence, and the problems these behaviours pose for individuals and society. Media reports about Amanda Todd’s experiences and state of mind acknowledged that she had described anxiety, depression, and panic disorder. But her death was portrayed as being directly caused by the experience of being bullied. (more…)

Make community radio your oasis for local, alternative, grassroots, and accessible music and information

Community radio is about volunteerism, social engagement, independent music, learning by doing, community capacity building, citizen journalism and more. Community radio volunteers are the cultural pioneers and opinion leaders of their local communities. Close to one-half of these volunteers are students and student leaders, they are opinion-makers, newsmakers, and trend-setters in their communities, and future leaders of Canadian culture and society. As well, the majority of these volunteers nationwide are artists, political and social activists, and members of multiple civil society organizations and grassroots movements. (more…)

‘Dying with dignity’ has been supported by many members of Unitarian Fellowships across Canada—for over thirty years

It’s your life and it should be your choice as to how and when you die. That’s what British Columbia resident Gloria Taylor believed. That’s why Taylor, who had Lou Gehrig’s disease, took her case for the right to die to the B.C. Supreme Court. She won that battle. Now, Gloria Taylor has died, of natural causes. Gloria’s mother, Anne Fomenoff, said of her daughter’s passing, “Gloria was able to live her final days free from the fear that she would be sentenced to suffer cruelly in a failing body.” (more…)

Artist explores motherhood and her ‘double life’

October 11th, 2012 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Artist explores motherhood and her ‘double life’)

Sara Robichaud’s exploration is shaped and informed by objects of personal and symbolic significance in her life

Nanaimo artist Sara Robichaud’s latest collection, Double Life, is a series of large-scale acrylic paintings that explore the various roles in her life. The birth of her daughter, Amelie, set in motion what seems to be a creative meditation about life, from birth to death, and the roles a mother—who also happens to be an artist—inhabits.

Intensely personal and symbolic objects inform the wider work in Double Life—including the  scales, surfaces, and colours Sara uses [opens to PDF]. “Like the personal objects that I use as inspiration, the paintings themselves become reminders of certain phases of my life—reflecting what was happening and how I felt,” she says. (more…)