Poster for Hamers bicycles, depicting six cyclists in a Dutch landscape.

Bicycling Into the Future

Across centuries, bicycles have embodied hopes for speed, freedom, efficiency, and survival.
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.
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.
Edgar Allan Poe by Félix Vallotton

Edgar Allan Poe’s Mechanical Imagination

Behind The Raven’s melancholy lies a theory of composition shaped by magazines, machines, and modernity.
Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison nearly being lynched in October 1835

Defying Slave Hunters in Boston’s Courts

A dramatic 1836 courtroom escape shows how Black women challenged slave hunters—and Boston’s elite.
Yarn bombed bicycle on the third street promenade in Santa Monica, presumably by artist OLEK

Knit One, Bomb Two: A Primer on Yarn Bombing

Soft fiber meets hard infrastructure in a global movement that tests the bounds of public art.
A bride in Guangzhou, China, photographed by by John Thomson,1869.

The Wedding Ritual Where Brides Wept in Song

In southern China, weddings once began with a ritual that let brides speak the unspeakable.
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.
Dana Elle Murphy

Dana Elle Murphy on Black Feminist Criticism

An interview with Dana Elle Murphy, whose work explores how drafts, fragments, and literary lineages expand our understanding of Black women’s writing.
Isaac Sears addressing the mob

When Profit Met Protest in Colonial New York

Economic self-interest shaped how New Yorkers responded to British taxes and imperial crackdowns.