Marina Black and Jo-Anne McArthur pose together outside of the studio.

Marina Black interviews award-winning photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur about the art of animal photojournalism, which seeks to show the public how animals in places like farms and factories really experience their lives.

Read the transcript

Guest Bio

Jo-Anne McArthur is an award-winning photojournalist, sought-after speaker, photo editor, and the founder of We Animals. She has visited over sixty countries to document our complex relationship with animals. She is the author of three books: We Animals (2014), Captive (2017), and HIDDEN: Animals in the Anthropocene (2020), and is the subject of Canadian filmmaker Liz Marshall’s acclaimed Canadian documentary, The Ghosts in Our Machine. Jo-Anne’s photographs have received accolades from Wildlife Photographer of the Year, Nature Photographer of the Year, Big Picture, AEFONA, Picture of the Year International, the Global Peace Award, and others. In 2020, Jo-Anne was thrilled to be a member of the jury for World Press Photo. She hails from Toronto, Canada.

Music credits

music by VeraMiller – Soothing Serenity from Pixabay

Cover art by Evan Zeller

About the author

+ posts

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Keep up to date with the latest stories from our newsroom.

You May Also Like
Gabby McMann (right) and Carrie Davis (left) are hip-hip. McMann wears a white tank top and a floral satin skirt. The colors are pink, magenta, black, blue, orange and green. The skirt has embroidered flowers and leaves with green and pink, and larger blue tulip petals with a pink flower bud. To the left, Davis wears an orange Saagajiwe Indigenous Studio orange t-shirt that has a blue, green, orange, logo shaped symmetrically in an embroidered stitched pattern in the centre.

Journalists: Report Indigenous Joy

A CBC News article recently caught the attention of Gabrielle McMann, an Ojibwe journalist, advisor and lecturer on Indigenous reporting, and a member of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation—but not for the right reason.
An illustration of five Canadian media company logos sitting in a courtroom. The five companies are the Globe and Mail, CBC-Radio, Toronto Star, Postmedia, and The Canadian Press.

Big Tech, Big Lawsuit

“Big tech, again and again, shows itself to be an industry that moves with entitlement and lack of care,” wrote author Michael Melgaard in a contribution for The Walrus in 2023. Not long before the magazine’s interviews with Melgaard and other Canadian writers, The Atlantic’s Alex Reisner had exposed the contents of Books3, a text database used to train LLaMA, Meta’s large language model (LLM) for AI-generated text.