Korean Orphan Choir in the Netherlands in 1962

How Cold War “Orphans” Sang Their Way into American Hearts

Touring choirs helped cast Korean children as ideal adoptees—and Americans as benevolent saviors.
Fashion plate from an 1869 issue of The Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine, surrounded by an 1861 color wheel by Michel Chevreul.

The Nineteenth-Century Science of Fashion

Victorian-era color theory moved from labs and studios into women’s magazines—and into everyday decisions about dress.

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.
JSTOR Daily celebrates Black History Month

Celebrating Black History Month

JSTOR Daily editors pick their favorite stories for Black History Month.

H. H. Richardson and the Making of an American Romanesque

Historical photographs help trace the emergence of Richardsonian Romanesque and its lasting influence on American architecture.
Protestors picket behind a security barrier outside the 15th United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations complex in New York City, 1961.

The Congo Crisis and the Rise of a Pan-African Musical Politics

How Patrice Lumumba’s assassination reshaped Black internationalism—and pushed musicians toward a new kind of activism.
Basque sheep herder in Adams County, Idaho, photographed by Dorothea Lange, 1939

The Racial Myth of the Basque Sheepherder

How ideas of ancient tradition shaped labor and immigration in the American West.
The Sacrifice of Isaac by Francesco Guardi, 1750s

A History of Existential Anxiety

From medieval theology to modern philosophy, dread has long been a guide for living ethically.

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.

The Medicinal Wood That Turned Water Blue

For nearly half a millennium, botanists sought the "true" identity of Lignum nephriticum, a mysterious marvel that confounded early modern science.