A collage of colorful shapes that include images of different public spaces.

Perspectives on Public Space: A JSTOR Daily Podcast

What is public space? How does it function? Whom does it benefit, and whom does it harm? These are just a few of the questions we put to experts on the subject.
A colorful collage that includes a family feeding pigeons in a city square, friends relaxing in a park, and an example of hostile architecture

On the Meaning and Value of Public Spaces

What is public space? How is it produced, and why is that production important for our social and political lives?
Theodore Roosevelt speaking with reporters

The President and the Press Corps

Theodore Roosevelt was the first White House occupant to seek control over how newspapers covered him.
Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman in Gaslight

Gaslight, Eleanor Bumpurs, and Alternative Geopolitics

Well-researched stories from Public Books, The Conversation, and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.
Massacre of the Innocents by Bartolo di Fredi

A Fierce Devotion to the “Empress of Hell”

Medieval dramatizations of the confrontation between the Virgin Mary and King Herod offered a symbolic resistance to tyranny.
A 14th century representation of Tutivillus

Tutivillus Is Watching You

For medieval scribes, mistakes couldn’t be easily shrugged off, as Tutivillus, the stickler demon, was always looking over their shoulders.
An old oyster bed now lying exposed on a beach in South Carolina. The oysters are no longer alive, but many shells remain in their original position.

Shucking the Past: Can Oysters Thrive Again?

Dredging and pollution devastated the once-bountiful reefs. Careful science may help bring them back.
An illustration from the cover of Amrita Pritam's Pinjar

Caught in Partition’s Violent Fray

Published seventy-five year ago, Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar explores the devastation suffered by the women of India and Pakistan after political rupture.
Lobby card for 1932 film Freaks

Tod Browning’s Freaks

Freaks asked audiences to think about the exploitative display of human difference while also demonstrating that the sideshow was a locus of community.
The Chinese Junk "Keying"–Captain Kellett–As she appeared in New York harbour July 13th, 1847

Chinese Ships, Danza Azteca, and Falling Asleep

Well-researched stories from Smithsonian Magazine, Sapiens, and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.