Ten of the Most Exciting Ways to Commemorate America’s 250th This Year
Our country’s birthday bash includes exhibitions, historical reenactments, a massive potluck and more
Why Gen Z Is Trading Night Clubs for Japanese-Style Listening Bars
Dark rooms filled with soft leather sofas and curated vinyl are popping up across the United States and the world
Ahead of the release of Sam Raimi’s “Send Help,” revisit the stories of Alexander Selkirk, Marguerite de la Rocque, the Tongan castaways and others who endured in remote locales
These Are the Top Ten Most Anticipated Museums Opening Around the World in 2026
New institutions dedicated to digital art, exploration, hip-hop, conservation and more are expected to welcome visitors this year
Joseph Weizenbaum realized that programs like his Eliza chatbot could “induce powerful delusional thinking in quite normal people”
As increased industrial activity puts fragile deep-sea ecosystems at risk, one artist is raising awareness about imperiled corals through scientific model making
As we approach the 100th anniversary of the birth of a jazz legend, look back on the staggering impact of his work and its continued relevance
How White Southerners Distorted the History of Ancient Egypt to Justify Slavery in the U.S.
American writers misleadingly interpreted Egypt’s past to argue that slavery was a divinely sanctioned institution
Long-overlooked documents housed at London’s Natural History Museum testify to the exchange of information between 18th-century European botanists and their Indigenous counterparts
When This Restoration Expert Gets His Hands on a Relic, the Result Can Send You Back in Time
At a Maryland antiques mall, Curtis Kauffman takes trinkets from the past and makes them better than ever. For his customers, that’s worth a lot
Nepal’s Mountainside Teahouses Elevate the Experience for Trekkers Heading to the Top of the World
Comforting rest stops dot the trail for adventurers ascending Mera Peak, offering food, rest and a warm cup of the local brew
How a Sudden Winter Storm in 1617 Sparked the Deadliest Witchcraft Trials in Norwegian History
During the 17th-century Finnmark witch trials, 91 people were executed in Norway’s northernmost region, mainly by burning at the stake
This Canadian Painter Found Her Muse in the Verdant Trees of British Columbia
Emily Carr took her brushes out of the gardens and into the rainforest to capture her local landscape in ways “beloved and also fraught”
Can Venice’s Iconic Crab Dish Survive Climate Change?
For more than 300 years, Italians have fried soft-shell green crabs, called moeche. But the culinary tradition is under threat
On January 1, 2026, copyrights will expire for comics, books, movies, musical compositions and other creative works from 1930, as well as sound recordings from 1925
Three experts share the science behind taking a dip in cold water—and offer safety tips that any potential plungers should bear in mind
The year’s most exciting discoveries included the site where a young George Washington stopped a friendly fire incident, the missing torso of a Buddha statue and a hidden Picasso painting
The magazine’s most-read articles of the year included a deep dive on the Scopes “monkey trial,” an interview with award-winning documentarians and a profile of quintuplets who found fame during the Great Depression
Written in 1882, “A Christmas Dream, and How It Came True,” covered many of the same themes as Dickens’ classic, albeit with a different audience in mind
“White Christmas” is one of the world’s best-selling tunes and continues to be in rotation more than eight decades later
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