Skip to content
Adah Menken

Gender Play in Nineteenth-Century Theater

In the 1800s, women playing tragic leads captivated crowds while critics struggled to reconcile talent with gender norms.

Archive Adventures

The Space Race’s Forgotten Theme Park

Preserved documents and photographs trace the rise and fall of an ambitious space-themed park born of 1960s Space Race optimism.

Roundup

JSTOR Daily Women's History Month Header

Celebrating Women’s History Month

Celebrate Women’s History Month with JSTOR Daily. We hope you’ll find the stories below a valuable resource for classroom or leisure reading.

The Where We Were

The Sylvester T. Everett Residence, architect Charles Frederick Schweinfurth’s first Cleveland commission. The residence was built 1883-1887 and demolished in 1938. It was located at corner of Euclid and East 40th Street.

How America’s Industrial Elite Built Their Own Palaces

Historic photographs capture Cleveland’s Millionaires’ Row, where Gilded Age wealth met revival-style splendor.

Reading Lists

Colorful landscape with colorful mountains and sun

Rights of Nature: A Reading List

What would it mean for rivers, forests, and animals to have legal rights? A global movement is rethinking law’s relationship to nature.

Most Recent

John Steinbeck, 1935.

Returning to Steinbeck’s Sea of Cortez

A literary classic doubles as data, helping scientists trace decades of ecological change in the Gulf of California.
Harpo Marx, ca. 1935

Why Lacan Loved Harpo Marx

A surprising encounter between high theory and Hollywood farce reshapes how we think about laughter and desire.

More Stories

Archive Adventures

The Space Race’s Forgotten Theme Park

Preserved documents and photographs trace the rise and fall of an ambitious space-themed park born of 1960s Space Race optimism.

Roundup

JSTOR Daily Women's History Month Header

Celebrating Women’s History Month

Celebrate Women’s History Month with JSTOR Daily. We hope you’ll find the stories below a valuable resource for classroom or leisure reading.

The Where We Were

The Sylvester T. Everett Residence, architect Charles Frederick Schweinfurth’s first Cleveland commission. The residence was built 1883-1887 and demolished in 1938. It was located at corner of Euclid and East 40th Street.

How America’s Industrial Elite Built Their Own Palaces

Historic photographs capture Cleveland’s Millionaires’ Row, where Gilded Age wealth met revival-style splendor.

Reading Lists

Colorful landscape with colorful mountains and sun

Rights of Nature: A Reading List

What would it mean for rivers, forests, and animals to have legal rights? A global movement is rethinking law’s relationship to nature.

Long Reads

Building Brasília

A twentieth-century experiment in urban planning promised progress—but carried immense financial and human costs.
Nose icon isolated on blue background

The Missing Sense in Modern Medicine

Researchers argue routine smell testing could detect neurodegenerative disease and other health risks years earlier than current exams.

Wayne Thiebaud’s Sweet Take on American Art

The beloved American painter rejected attempts to categorize his work as a Pop Art as he experimented with texture, light, and nostalgia.

When Mao’s Mango Mania Took Over China

A fleeting cult built around a mango exposes the logic, and illogic, of Mao’s personality cult.

Unlike already established symbols such as the peony, peach, or pomegranate, the mango had no preexisting meaning in China and, importantly, no association with emperors or divinity.

When Mao’s Mango Mania Took Over China

John Steinbeck, 1935.

Returning to Steinbeck’s Sea of Cortez

A literary classic doubles as data, helping scientists trace decades of ecological change in the Gulf of California.
Source: https://collections.artsmia.org/art/36169/gathering-wild-rice-seth-eastman

Wild Rice and the Rights of Nature

A groundbreaking lawsuit asks whether wild rice, or manoomin, can hold legal rights under tribal law and the growing rights of nature movement.
A series of images in color block colors, including a map, a photo of a group of people digging, and an architectural mockup of a park landscape

Designing for Community and Climate in Los Angeles

How can we design public spaces that help people thrive and connect—with each other and with their environment?