From the cover of Sidereus Nuncius

Anatomy of a Galileo Forgery

It was hailed as a historic discovery—until a trail of clues revealed one of the rare-book world's most audacious scams.
Oscar Wilde and Alfred Douglas, 1893

The Catholic Turn of Oscar Wilde’s Lover

Lord Alfred Douglas’s journey from Hellenism to Catholic mysticism shows how queer Victorians sought meaning and redemption through religion.
Tyeb Mehta

The Lasting Power of Tyeb Mehta’s Art

Long overshadowed by his peers, the Indian painter is now recognized for his haunting vision of modern life.
Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.40754518?seq=22

The Oral Histories of the AIDS Crisis

The voices of artists and activists illuminate the human experience behind the AIDS epidemic.
Fidel Castro, Havana, 1978

Inventing “Machismo” in the US

Academics and media turned “machismo” into a cultural stereotype during the Cold War.
An edited collage of images from early National Geographic artwork. The photograph of this woman from Biskra, Algeria is from a 1917 issue.

How National Geographic Conquered American Culture

The magazine’s explosive growth mirrored the nation's emergence as a global empire.
Collage of underground publications

LGBTQIA+ Pride Month

June is LGBTQ Pride Month, so JSTOR Daily gathered some of our favorite stories to celebrate. All with free and accessible scholarly research.
Mei Lan-fang

How Race Shaped New York’s View of Chinese Opera

In 1930s New York, Chinese opera was praised uptown but mocked in Chinatown.
An illustration of Musa × paradisiaca

A History Wrapped in Banana Leaves

How hallacas and the banana plant became intertwined in Venezuelan cultural memory.
Preaching to the Birds by Fritz Eichenberg

Fritz Eichenberg’s Art of Human Connection

A master printmaker defended the emotional power of representational art in an increasingly mechanized world.