Celebrate National Coffee Day and Get Your Caffeine Fix With These 15 Photos
It’s a grand day to enjoy coffee-centric snapshots from the Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest
A new exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts spotlights 40 women who found fame in the Low Countries between 1600 and 1750, including Koerten, Judith Leyster and Clara Peeters
Creator Richard O’Brien reflects on how the 1975 movie musical became a haven for the “marginalized and disenfranchised”
At This Harlem Chef’s Table, the Rosh Hashana Menu Is Full of Ethiopian Spices
With a café in New York City and a new cookbook, Beejhy Barhany is bringing the stories and flavors of Ethiopian Jews to the States
A new biography examines how 19th-century Americans remembered Mary Ball Washington, who raised the future president largely on her own after her husband’s death in 1743
When the Cows Come Home in the Alps, the Swiss Eat Raclette
Every September, dairy farmers herd cattle from high-alpine pastures back to the villages where they reside for the winter and celebrate the occasion by roasting cheese over a fire
The Tiny New York Town Where Mediums Give Voice to the Dead
Lily Dale is home to about 40 mediums who connect thousands of spiritual seekers with their deceased loved ones
Modern tennis’ predecessor was a different—and potentially more dangerous—test of athletic prowess
The Colorful, Scandalous, True History of the Machine That Created American Pop
The jukebox got its start earlier than you might think, but it truly became iconic when rock ‘n’ roll took over in the 1950s
In correspondence with a passionate abolitionist in London, the great American orator didn’t hold back when talking about the 16th president, or his successor, the much-maligned Andrew Johnson
A New Exhibit in Toronto Reexamines the Works of the Baroque Masters
In her monumental work inspired by the Rape of the Sabine Women, an artist reimagines a much-depicted story from antiquity
These Photos of Harvesting Cranberries Transform the Annual Ritual Into a Shimmering Spectacle
In eastern Massachusetts, flooded wetlands cover the landscape as farmers collect the crop that features on Thanksgiving tables nationwide
The First Magazines Written for Career Women Reveal a Portrait of Immense Creativity and Hope
Publications including “Mademoiselle,” “Glamour” and the long-forgotten “Charm” first emerged in the 1930s to satisfy an emergent force in the workplace
A Veteran Pixar Animator’s Newest Book Is an Epic Undertaking That Began 5,000 Years Ago
Sanjay Patel enjoyed success on YouTube with his colorful shorts and is about to release a richly illustrated book that tells the story of the longest poem in the world
The Japanese City Known for Making Knives That Are a Cut Above
Ninety percent of professional chefs in Japan buy their knives in Sakai. TikTok users are spreading the word, and demand is skyrocketing, as international tourists want in on the action
Where Did the Big Bang Happen? And More Questions From Our Readers
You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts
The famously reclusive novelist amassed a collection of thousands of books ranging in topics from philosophical treatises to advanced mathematics to the naked mole-rat
The beloved dog starred in six movies during the Roaring Twenties. After Strongheart died in 1929, author J. Allen Boone chronicled their enduring connection in a pair of nonfiction books
The Egyptian government is making changes to enhance the visitor experience around the pyramids, but are these modifications threatening the livelihoods of local communities rooted in generations-old tourism practices?
How Davy Crockett, the Rugged Frontiersman Killed at the Alamo, Became an Unlikely American Hero
During his lifetime, Crockett—who went by David, not Davy—shaped his own myth. In the 20th century, his legacy got a boost from none other than Walt Disney
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