Smithsonian’s Folklife Festival Moves into Your Living Room
This year, experience the familiar smells, sights and sounds, while streaming the events online
Husky Ancestors Started Hauling Sleds for Humans Nearly 10,000 Years Ago
A genetic study shows that today’s Arctic sled dogs have something curious in common with polar bears
Now for the First Time, Arthur Jafa’s ‘Love Is the Message, The Message Is Death’ Streams Online
The seminal work, a contemporary Guernica, is the first joint acquisition for the Hirshhorn and the Smithsonian American Art Museum
A Virus Study You’ve Never Heard of Helped Us Understand COVID-19
What Columbia University researchers learned when they tried to get a complete picture of how respiratory viruses spread across Manhattan
The Multiple Truths in the Works of the Enslaved Poet Phillis Wheatley
In this endearing homage, poet-scholar drea brown finds ancestral and personal healing
How Lakota Values Endure 144 Years After the Battle of Little Bighorn
Following Custer’s defeat, tribal leaders made difficult decisions to ensure the safety of their people that continue today in the time of COVID-19
A Brief History of Anti-Fascism
As long as the ideology has threatened marginalized communities, groups on the left have pushed back with force
COVID-19 Adds a New Snag to the 2020 Census Count of Native Americans
The nation’s indigenous population has long been undercounted, but the pandemic presents extra hurdles
When Henry VIII and Francis I Spent $19 Million on an 18-Day Party
Five hundred years ago, the English and French kings proclaimed their friendship—and military might—at the Field of Cloth of Gold
Why Hawk Moths Are the Underdogs of the Pollinator World
These pollinators safeguard many habitats, visiting the rare and beautiful flowers of many native and endangered plants
Cities Are Eyeing Microtransit During COVID-19 Pandemic
From Los Angeles to Abu Dhabi, transit authorities are creating on-demand systems. But experts say there are tradeoffs
More than seventy-five years ago, the final great battle of WWII convinced Allied leaders to drop the atomic bomb on Japan
The Father of the Nation, George Washington Was Also a Doting Dad to His Family
Though he had no biological children, the first president acted as a father figure to Martha’s descendants
Is COVID-19 the Tipping Point for Telemedicine?
Sheltering in place has pushed virtual health care into the mainstream, making us wonder if we’ll ever go back to waiting rooms
What Perry Mason Taught Americans About the Criminal Justice System
How one of the first courtroom dramas has shaped what we watch and how we see the law
The Smithsonian Magazine Crossword: Pop Quiz
Test your mettle with this puzzle created exclusively for our readers
Brain Gene Tops the List for Making Humans, Human
In a study involving marmosets, a primate genetically similar to humans, researchers have come closer to understanding brain evolution
Do Volcanoes Spew a Cooler Lava?
Smithsonian geologist Liz Cottrell has answers to your questions on black lava and the Earth’s molten outer core in the “Dr Is In” video series
A New Project Hopes to Give Transgender Americans Some Much-Needed Haircuts
To promote mental health during the pandemic, the Trans Clippers Project has provided hundreds of trans and nonbinary people with a free pair of clippers
Fourteen Works of Art Portray the Bonds of Fatherhood Across Time and Culture
Celebrate Father’s Day with works pulled from the Smithsonian collections
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