From “experimental archaeology” to the mysterious appeal of exploration, the wide-ranging subjects detailed in these titles captivated Smithsonian magazine’s science contributors this year ...
Netflix struck a deal to buy one of Hollywood’s most storied studios. But a scorned rival, and the Trump administration, may ...
NPR Arts Desk reporter Andrew Limbong joined the Standard to share some of his picks from the list, as well as highlight a ...
Faith No More's Bill Gould looks back on the making of We Care A Lot, his band's thrillingly unhinged debut album, now celebrating its 40th birthday ...
Dr. Mikki McComb-Kobza explains how, when people replace mistruths with facts, knowledge dissolves fear, compassion replaces ...
Why do the works of Jane Austen still hold so much appeal 250 years after her birth? We ask members of the Jane Austen Society of North America as well as writers Sandra Cisneros and Brandon Taylor.
Our body is home to trillions of microscopic organisms that, through reciprocal interaction with our brain, shape our mind.
The beloved novel Porgy quietly turned 100 years old this year, nearly unnoticed by the literati. It’s a Charleston story of sex, drugs and violence in a fictional Gullah tenement that inspired global ...
In 'Superhero,' veteran character actor Tim Blake Nelson invents a comics-based studio to prod the global dominance of ...
In conversation with professor Amir Eshel, Sakamoto reflects on resonance and poetic thinking as a way of being.
Two spoken word poets, Lailonie Johnson and Dakohai Matityahu, opened the show, immediately penetrating barriers between performers and the audience as well as between audience members themselves.
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