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.

The Explorer Who Faked His Way Through the Hajj

Englishman Richard Burton wore several disguises, ranging from merchant to doctor to pilgrim in the holy city of Mecca.
Portraits of victims at the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Santiago, Chile

Memory’s Role in Chile’s Democratic Rebirth

In post-Pinochet Chile, public memory became a pathway to accountability.
Eirene and Ploutos

In Pursuit of Peace, Ancient Athens Created a Goddess

In the aftermath of the Peloponnesian War, Athenians worshipped Eirene. Her cult reflects the political role of religion in Ancient Greece.
An illustration of a forest consumed by fire as animals flee.

The Fires This Time

To understand current mass burning events better, scientists are turning to the phenomenon known as the Medieval Climate Anomaly.
William Butler Yeats with his wife Georgie Hyde Lees, 1923

Yeats and the Occult Imagination

Beneath his poems lay a lifelong devotion to magic, divination, and a visionary system that shaped his most prophetic work.
Lucy Stone

Marriage and the Maiden Name

While many women trade surnames they had at birth for their husbands’, some hold on tightly to the former, a tradition famously established by Lucy Stone.