An abstract black and white and yellow illustration

Why Does Music in Science Fiction Sound Like That?

Imagining the sound of other worlds has a long past—and persistent creative limits.
George Templeton Strong

Inside a Four-Million-Word Diary of 1860s New York

George Templeton Strong chronicles Civil War–era New York with unmatched immediacy, capturing daily life and upheaval.
A traditional Malay healer, ca. 1890

The Supernatural Side of Malayan Rice Farming

In agrarian Malaya, spirit mediums negotiated with deities and demons to safeguard crops and shape the rhythms of rural life.
An illustration from a childrens' story from 1922

Worried About Teens Today? So Were Adults in the 1920s

A century ago, new technology and mobility reshaped what it meant to be young, linking rural life more closely to the city.
Images of Rastus Robot in an issue of Radio-Craft magazine from 1931

How America Racialized the Robot

Early robots in the US evolved from symbols of revolt into racialized figures tied to labor and the legacy of slavery.
Child Reading a Book

Another Way to Boost Fourth Grade Reading Scores? Preschool

Early education doesn’t erase inequality, but research shows preschool can significantly narrow reading achievement gaps.
Studio portrait of amateur photographer Tan Gwat Bing in Central Java

The Immigrant Photographers Who Shaped a Nation’s Image

In early twentieth-century Indonesia, Chinese-run studios brought modernity into focus.
Chunar seen from the Ganges, Uttar Pradesh. Coloured etching by William Hodges, 1785.

William Hodges and the Art of Empire

How a traveling landscape painter helped create a homogeneous vision of the British Empire.
Terror Antiquus by L.Bakst, 1908

Islands of the Imagination

A short history of islands as sites of political escape and reinvention, from the myth of Atlantis to modern seasteading.

Just Wilde About Hair

The evolution of Oscar Wilde’s hair offers insight into how he constructed and revised his public identity.