Why Does the Bible Forbid Tattoos?

And have we been misinterpreting Leviticus? | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Lives Beyond the Life Sentences

Their lives didn't stop when the judge sentenced them to life in prison. Then what? A 1994 issue of The Angolite profiled the longest-serving Americans. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Why anybody needed an SUV to go to the opera?

Skeptics in Sweden voiced concerns from the get-go. Even automotive industry journalists wondered why anybody needed an SUV to go to the opera. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Herbs and Verbs: How to Do Witchcraft for Real (2017)

Like for real real. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

When the Push Button Was New, People Were Freaked

The mundane interface between human and machine caused social anxiety in the late nineteenth century. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Jean-François Champollion Deciphers the Rosetta Stone

On September 27, 1822, the French philologist announced that he’d decrypted the key that would unlock Egypt’s ancient past. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Keeping Time with Incense Clocks

As chronicled by Chinese poet Yu Jianwu, the use of fire and smoke for time measurement dates back to at least the sixth century CE. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Urchins of New York and Elsewhere

Remembering the Sky Parlor for lost children and the public’s fascination with those who went astray. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Changing Face of Southern California

An expansive collection of postcards captures the evolving cultural landscape of Southern California—particularly greater Los Angeles—in the twentieth century. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Chilean Wide Web?

Salvador Allende’s attempt to network the national economy mirrored his government’s struggle to balance centralization and decentralization. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Does Law Exist to Provide Moral Order?

Is social cohesion possible in plural societies? Philosopher H. L. A. Hart weighed in amid debates on abortion and same-sex relationships. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Fifteen Puzzle has obsessed fans for more than a century

Not so fast, Wordle. The Fifteen Puzzle, a challenge that inspired poetry, has obsessed fans for more than a century. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Imperial Science and the Company’s Museum

The East India Company’s London museum stored the stuff of empire, feeding the growth of new collections-based disciplines and scientific societies. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Trouvelot’s Total Lunar Eclipse

Immigrant artist Étienne Léopold Trouvelot used his skills to accurately represent the details—and the sublimity—of our solar system. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The First Koreatown

Pachappa Camp, the first Korean-organized immigrant settlement in the United States, was established through the efforts of Ahn Chang Ho. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Elvis and American Karate

Presley’s embrace of martial arts resonated with working- and middle-class Americans who felt alienated from the US justice system. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

In Defense of Polonius

Shakespeare’s tedious old fool was also a dad just doing his best. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Living Newspaper Speaks

Scripted from front-page news, the Federal Theatre Project’s Living Newspaper plays were part entertainment, part protest, and entirely educational. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Electrical Fashions

From the light-bulb dress to galvanic belts, electrified clothing offered a way to experience and conquer a mysterious and vigorous force. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Street Dogs Spend Their Days

Generally lazy, often friendly, the dogs of India know how to relax. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Deaf Colonists in Victorian-Era Canada

In 1884, educator Jane Groom defied naysayers to found a community for working-class Deaf people on prairies of Manitoba. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Plant of the Month: Robusta Coffee (2021)

What’s there to love about “bad” coffee? For much of the world, plenty. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Emancipation Proclamation: Annotated

Abraham Lincoln proclaimed freedom for enslaved people in America on January 1, 1863. Today, we've annotated the Emancipation Proclamation for readers. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Plant of the Month: Cork (2021)

Why is cork so strongly associated with bottle stoppers? The answer goes back centuries. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

How to Build the Netflix of Love (2018)

There's no shortage of online dating sites and apps. But there’s one common problem with these services: they’re all looking at the wrong data. Dating apps should take a hint from Netflix's algorithm. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Plant of the Month: Peanut

The peanut, a natural hybrid of two species, originated in Bolivia. It now plays a critical role in food cultures around the world. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Declaration of Independence: Annotated (2021)

Related links to free scholarly context on JSTOR for the foundational document in American government. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

“I Have a Dream”: Annotated

Martin Luther King, Jr.'s iconic speech, annotated with relevant scholarship on the literary, political, and religious roots of his words. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

What Happened to Tagging? (2019)

Tags decentralized and democratized the organization of information. What became of "social tagging?" | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

How to Use Zotero and Scrivener for Research-Driven Writing (2019)

This month, I’m doing something a little different with my column: I’m sharing the system I use to write it, so that you can use or adapt my system. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Better Writing Begins with the Right Tools (2018)

Writing software has not only changed the way we write; it's changed the way we read. It pays to think about what we want from our writing tools. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Uneasy Symbiosis Between T. S. Eliot and Groucho Marx

Class and religious differences helped thwart the would-be friendship between two cultural titans, suggesting opposites may attract, but may not always adhere. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Comparing Editions of David Walker’s Abolitionist Appeal

Digitization allows researchers to trace editorial and authorial changes in archival content. Both are central to the study of this famous abolitionist pamphlet. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

The Dubious Art of the Dad Joke

Is it really only dads who can tell dad jokes? And is this corny humor universal? Our linguist takes a deep dive. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 1 year ago

Terence McKenna’s Anarchic Psychedelic Religion

Terence McKenna was an evangelist for the use of psilocybin and other mind-altering drugs, as a way to transcend and escape “untrammeled rationalism.” | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Heroic Newsboy Funerals

These collective rituals of death brought meaning and identity to urban, working-class youth. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Praising Maple Sugar in the Early American Republic

In Early America, some prestigious residents advocated for the replacement of cane sugar, supplied by enslaved workers, with maple sugar from family farms. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Why Aren’t There More Dogs at the Doctor’s Office?

Dogs can use their superb sense of smell to identify disease in human patients. What’s keeping them from using this ability in the healthcare industry? | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

The Nimatron: first 'video game' debuted in 1939

The world’s first video game made its debut at the Westinghouse pavilion at the New York World's Fair in 1939. Read all about it! | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

What Happens When Police Use AI to Predict and Prevent Crime?

With the dawn of artificial intelligence, a slew of new machine learning tools promise to help protect us with data. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Only Love Can Break Your Heart?

Broken heart syndrome, or Takotsubo syndrome, is thought to be caused by stress. It seems to be on the increase during the COVID-19 pandemic. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Flu Pandemic’s Impact on Movie Theaters

With WWI coming to end, 1918 should have been a good year for the movies. Then along came influenza. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Mesmerizing Labor

The man who introduced mesmerism to the US was a slave-owner from Guadeloupe, where planters were experimenting with “magnetizing” their enslaved people. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

The Disappearance of Japan’s “Third Gender”

Gender roles in Edo Japan recognized an in-between position for young men, called Wakashu, that was erased as Japan westernized. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Fire Ants Form Rafts (2017)

Floating masses of fire ants have been observed drifting in the floodwaters resulting from Hurricane Harvey. How does a swarm of fire ants float? | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

Whatever Happened to Airships?

In moving away from fossil fuels, some in aviation are thinking of bringing back helium-assisted flight. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

An Incan Nobleman Contested Spanish History

Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala left behind a one-of-a-kind object that undermines the crónicas de Indias. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago

The Whole Earth Catalog, Where Counterculture Met Cyberculture

Long before Facebook or Twitter, an L.L. Bean-style catalog for hippies inspired the creation of one of the world’s first social networks. | Continue reading


@daily.jstor.org | 2 years ago