An upcoming Smithsonian exhibition, “Votes For Women,” delves into the complexities and biases of the nature of persistence
Folk belief holds that if you have won one Oscar, your odds of ever winning a second are greatly diminished by the dreaded “Oscar Jinx”
Smithsonian curator of religion Peter Manseau weighs in on a history that must be told
The number of visitors to this self-proclaimed Shakespearean “city of love” typically swells during the week around Valentine’s Day
As clean-up milestones are registered by a recent assessment of the nation’s largest estuary, a Smithsonian geographer drops in on the region
One Lesson From Burning Man—Embrace the Dust
In a new book on space exploration, Smithsonian curator emeritus Roger D. Launius predicts boots on the Red Planet ground by the 2030s
The 2019 nationwide release, 47 years after it was made, means audiences at last will see the Queen of Soul’s transcendent masterpiece
From an upper jaw to red ocher paintings, two Smithsonian scholars note the significant discoveries in human evolution this trip around the sun
Charged with manslaughter, the owners were acquitted in December 1911. A Smithsonian curator reexamines the labor and business practices of the era
Disney warned of reading too much into the timing of his films, but just now everyone could use a little “spit spot” from America’s favorite British Nanny
This grand tradition has allowed Americans across the country to pay their respects to the chief executive
Here are eleven titles that intrigued and thrilled Smithsonian's knowledge seekers this year
Troubled times always bring out the noble bandit who, in the face of tyranny and corruption, robs from the rich to give back to the people
LA musicians Carlos Samaniego and Natalia Melendez do traditional Mexican music their way
Smithsonian curator Eric Jentsch weighs into the legacy of the comic-book mastermind
But the bugler remembered the story a bit wrong. A century later, a curator sets the record straight
The Smithsonian Institution extends its loan of the historic artifact to Islay—a small island with a big heart
Celebrating the October 1958 publication of <em>A Bear Called Paddington,</em> Smithsonian Libraries takes a look at several pop-up books
Smithsonian ethnomusicologist Dan Sheehy poignantly recalls the brutal outcome of a nation divided
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