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Eternity Martis

Dr Eternity Martis

Assistant Professor

Department: School of Journalism

Email: emartis@torontomu.ca

Phone: (416) 979-5000 x556398

Education: BA Hons. (Western University, English Language and Literature and Women's Studies and Feminist Research), MA (Ontario Toronto Metropolitan Univeristy, Journalism), PhD

Discipline: Journalism

Areas of Expertise:

  • Anti-Racist Media

  • Gender-Based Violence Affecting Young Women

  • Memoir Writing

  • Racism on University Campuses

Research Interests

Race and Racism in Society & Media; Media Criticism; Intersections of Race and Gender in Society and Media; Gender-Based Violence; Trauma-Informed Journalism & The Power of Personal Storytelling.

Dr. Eternity Martis is an assistant professor in the School of Journalism. She is an award-winning journalist and editor whose work on race and gender has appeared in The Huffington Post, VICE, Chatelaine, Maclean’s, Flare, Salon, CBC, Hazlitt, The Walrus, Refinery29, The Fader, Complex and more, including on academic syllabi around the world. In 2020, Dr. Martis developed “Reporting On Race: The Black Community in the Media,” the first reporting course of its kind in Canada. She is the co-lead of the Reporting in Black Communities project, a guide and resource kit for journalists, educators and students to report on Black communities in Canada with equity, dignity and accuracy. She is also the author of the bestselling, award-winning memoir about  "They Said This Would Be Fun." about her experience as a Black woman at a predominantly white university. The book is the winner of the Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize for Non-fiction.

Dr. Martis brings a deep understanding of students' experiences from underrepresented backgrounds and of media coverage of marginalized communities. She has also been a writing coach for several years, specializing in sensitivity reading, with clients including journalism students, professors, TEDx speakers, published authors, and financial advisers, ranging in age from 18 to 60+.

  • Finalist for Memoir/Autobiography and Social Change at International Book Awards
  • 2020 Winner (editor) of Best Newsletter Digital Publishing Awards
  • 2019 Winner of Best Investigative Feature at Canadian Publishing Awards
  • 2017 Finalist for Best New Writer at National Magazine Awards
  • 2017 finalist (editor) Digital Publishing Awards for Best Personal Essay

Related Content

For the latest updates, please visit the faculty page linked below.

Selected Media & Activities

Dr. Eternity Martis talks to TVO today about her book, "They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up." Martis's memoir reflects on her experiences of finding the atmosphere unwelcoming and hostile to Black women.

Following a successful student-led petition, Dr. Eternity Martis discusses teaching JRN 333: Reporting on Race, its launch, and the importance of examining Black representation in journalism.

Link to Dr Eternity Martis' Artitcle titled The Health Effects of Anti-Black Racism  (external link, opens in new window) 

In this featured piece with The Local, Dr. Eternity Martis explores the dangerous intersection of medicine and bias in an article titled "The Health Effects of Anti-Black Racism," examining why Black Torontonians continue to face the worst health profiles in the city despite its multicultural reputation.