Smithsonian Magazine: September 2010

September 2010 Issue Cover

Features

The Art of Resilience

Within weeks of January's devastating earthquake, Haiti's surviving painters and sculptors were taking solace from their work
By Bill Brubaker

Thinking Like a Chimpanzee

By getting into his subjects' heads, Japan's top ape researcher is learning what distinguishes them from us
By Jon Cohen

The Shock of War

The first catastrophic conflict of the 20th century gave rise to a baffling war injury known as shell shock. The diagnosis remains controversial to this day
By Caroline Alexander

Pathway Home

An innovative program in California brings relief to combatants afflicted by post-traumatic stress disorder and brain injuries
By Robert M. Poole

Reinventing Rio

Approaching its 450th anniversary, Rio de Janeiro is getting ready for its close-up—as host of the 2012 Earth Summit, the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics
By Alan Riding

Over the Hump

In the deserts of Yemen, Zaraniq Tribesmen vie to leap camels in a single bound
By Brandon Springer

Ghost Writer

Pearl Curran, a St. Louis housewife, channeled a 17th-century spirit to the heights of a 20th-century literary stardom
By Gioia Diliberto

Departments

From the Editor

Aftershocks

Cataclysms and their consequences
By Carey Winfrey

Letters

Letters

Readers Respond to the July/August Issue
By Smithsonian magazine

Phenomena

Crude Awakening

Scientists are just beginning to grasp how profoundly oil has devastated the Gulf of Mexico
By Michelle Nijhuis

Indelible Images

The Rarest Bird

Newfound negatives record a very close encounter with a young ivory-billed woodpecker
By Stephen Lyn Bales

This Month in History

September Anniversaries

Momentous or Merely Memorable
By Alison McLean

Wild Things

Wild Things: Life as We Know It

Orchids, Baboons, Ancient Reptiles and More...
By T. A. Frail, Jesse Rhodes, Jessica Righthand, Brandon Springer and Sarah Zielinski

From the Castle

Lest We Forget

By G. Wayne Clough

Around the Mall

The Ambassador of Jazz

Smithsonian music curator John Edward Hasse has set the standard for jazz education in this country—and around the globe
By Erica R. Hendry

The Object at Hand

Amazing Grace

Harriet Tubman's hymnal evokes a life devoted to liberation
By Owen Edwards

Q&A

Q and A: Jules Feiffer

The cartoonist, illustrator, author and playwright reflects on happy memories and the positive side of failure
By Jesse Rhodes

What's Up

What's Up

By Erica R. Hendry

The Last Page

So Where You From?

Why must a foreign accent always invite an inquisition?
By Iva R. Skoch

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