People silhouettes outlined with a dotted line and amongst them a woman with a question mark on her face

Ideal Missing Persons

Overrepresented as victims, missing white women and girls drive ratings and clicks for traditional and internet media.
A City of Fantasy, mid 19th century

The First Futurists and the World They Built

From Saint-Simon to Silicon Valley, the urge to forecast the future has always masked a struggle over who gets to define it.
A series of color images showing the Sharing Garden in Providence, the Providence skyline, and a plants in a garden

In the Sharing Garden

How one family physician fosters food justice, social connectivity, and better health at a local community garden.
Quiet moonlight (beyond Catalina Island) by Granville Redmond, 1907

Explaining the Tides Before Newton

Astronomical explanations for tides, usually credited to Isaac Newton, can be traced to thinkers like Strabo and Pliny in the Classical era.
The Musical Games by Anne Young

The Hidden History of Women Game Designers

Nineteenth-century women turned music lessons into interactive entertainment, complete with spinning wheels and ivory counters.
A table with many dishes of food

Potluck Nation

Food in America is a living archive of exchange and adaptation, where “ethnic” cuisines blend and redefine what national identity tastes like.

We Descend from the River

Public spaces are often sites of commemoration of events in the nation’s history. But which public is represented in and served by those spatialized celebrations?
Sunday Morning in front of the Arch Street Meeting House, Philadelphia, 1811

Quakers Against Thanksgiving

In colonial America, government “thanksgivings” blurred faith and politics. For Quakers, rejecting them was an act of religious conviction.
A vintage photograph of a Turkey Dinner

Thanksgiving Stories

Turkey or Tofurkey? Stuffing or dressing? Whatever the controversy, these Thanksgiving stories will slake your appetite!
An ancient glacier channel at Lake Tenaya in Yosemite National Park, 1872

Living Laboratories: Science and the National Parks

National parks in the US are filled with glaciers and volcanoes, which isn't an accident, as the parks developed alongside the sciences of glaciology and volcanology.