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An Editor Bids Jstor Daily Farewell

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This list of my favorite JSTOR Daily stories is far too long. We have published so many amazing stories over the ten years since we launched that I find it exceedingly difficult to choose which to highlight. Let us all, then, share our favorites on social media, for by honoring the past, we seed (without ceding) the future.

How We Escape It: An Essay

September 6, 2017
Escape is an ancient word, escapism, a modern one, and the designation of a genre—“escape literature”—dates to the 1930s.

Will Art Save Our Descendants from Radioactive Waste?

May 13, 2015
What if the great threat to human life isn't a bomb dropping down from above but radioactive waste creeping up from below? Will art come to our rescue then?

Can Intellectual Humility Save Us from Ourselves?

January 24, 2024
Intellectual humility is defined as a willingness to admit you’re wrong. It could be just the idea for our self-righteous times.

Thanksgiving Is a Feast of Things Forgotten

November 22, 2016
Thanksgiving is a feast so complex and semiotically dense that things are very often forgotten and rarely go according to plan.

The Unsung Heroine of Lichenology

September 26, 2020
Elke Mackenzie’s moments of self-citation illuminate the hopes of someone who, against ease and tradition, did not wish to separate her identity from her research.

A Belief in Ghosts: Poetry and the Shared Imagination

October 4, 2016
An essay from poet Dorothea Lasky on poetry, ghosts, and the shared imagination.

The First Famous Football Team Behind Bars

February 8, 2023
Sing Sing's football team, The Black Sheep, ascended to fame even though its players were incarcerated. One player was so good, he signed with the Eagles.

The Sorry State of Apologies

July 1, 2020
"Sorry" can be more than a mere word when it has real-world consequences.

“Thoughts and Prayers” in Greek Tragedy

December 4, 2017
With national tragedies now as frequent and predictable as sunrises, no phrase has lost consolatory power more swiftly than “thoughts and prayers.”

John B. Cade’s Project to Document the Stories of the Formerly Enslaved

January 26, 2022
A recently digitized slave narrative collection consists of original manuscripts compiled by John Brother Cade and his students at Southern University.

The San Diego Lowrider Archival Project

September 22, 2023
The lessons of "low and slow."

Why Companies Are So Interested in Your Myers-Briggs Type

September 7, 2022
If you’ve looked for a job recently, you’ve probably encountered the personality test. You may also have wondered if it was backed by scientific research.

Adventures in Poetry

April 20, 2022
Published in the East Village from 1968 to 1975, Adventures in Poetry features poems by New York School poets Anne Waldman, Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, Allen Ginsberg, Bernadette Mayer, and more.

Sorry, but Jane Eyre Isn’t the Romance You Want It to Be

February 27, 2019
Charlotte Brontë, a woman whose life was steeped in stifled near-romance, refused to write love as ruly, predictable, or safe.

America’s Workforce Runs on Uppers

June 1, 2016
Uppers like Benzedrine and cocaine provided a willing workforce for our capitalist economy. Now, Americans are turning to ADHD medications.

Goth Won’t Die, but It Wants a Funeral Anyway

January 26, 2020
Like its celebrated vampires, the Goth subculture has roots in a fascination with death and cultural transgression.

Institutionalized Racism: A Syllabus

May 31, 2020
How can we help students understand George Floyd's death in the context of institutionalized racism?

The Wright Brothers: Babysitters Extraordinaire

September 23, 2022
Wilbur and Orville Wright may not have been “first in flight,” but they were first in taking care of their nieces and nephews on the weekends.

Robert Hayden’s Relatable Fatigue

April 22, 2020
There’s a constant attention to the burdens of history in Robert Hayden’s poems. Even amid the beauties of life, the ghosts of the past linger.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Radical Project Isn’t Finished

March 14, 2019
A fiery advocate against gender discrimination, Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s radicalism reveals itself in her argument for the Equal Rights Amendment.

The Linguistics of Mass Persuasion: How Politicians Make “Fetch” Happen (Part I)

February 10, 2016
Inspired by the Gretchen famous line in the film Mean Girls, Chi Luu explores how politicians mobilize language to sway public opinion.

How Black-Owned Record Stores Helped Create Community

December 7, 2020
What was it like for Black American music lovers during the age of segregation to find a place they could call their own?

A Mini History of the Tiny Purse

May 29, 2019
The purse has always been political, a reflection of changing economic realities and gender roles.

Workplace Burnout is Nothing New

June 15, 2019
Doctors were talking about the dangers of chronic stress, exhaustion, and anxiety back in 1909, predicting dire consequences if the symptoms were ignored.

Stage Death: From Offstage to in Your Face

September 21, 2016
Death on stage has a long, gory history. From Ancient Greece to 19th century Paris to The Walking Dead. Why does theatre like death so much?

How 19th Century Scientists Predicted Global Warming

December 17, 2019
Today’s headlines make climate change seem like a recent discovery. But Eunice Newton Foote and others have been piecing it together for centuries.

How Language and Climate Connect

July 10, 2019
While we’re losing biological diversity, we’re also losing linguistic and cultural diversity at the same time. This is no coincidence.

Edmund Dulac’s Fairy Tales Go to War

December 16, 2022
One of the best-known illustrators of the “golden age of children’s gift books,” Dulac was also a subtle purveyor of Allied propaganda during the Great War.

The Algerian War: Cause Célèbre of Anticolonialism

June 29, 2022
On July 5, 1962, Algeria declared its independence after 132 years of French occupation. The transition was chaotic and violent, but inspired revolutionaries worldwide.

Kolkata and Partition: Between Remembering and Forgetting

August 10, 2022
In West Bengal’s capital city, suppressing the painful history of the 1947 Partition allows for the celebration of moments of endurance and success.

How Veterans Created PTSD

November 9, 2021
Now a cultural staple, PTSD is a newer diagnosis. How have conceptions of trauma morphed and what does it mean for US institutions and society?

The Meaning of Time in The Hour Glass

October 13, 2022
Writings from a women's prison in the 1930s grapple with philosophical questions on time and life. “The mere lapse of years is not life.”

The Devastation of Black Wall Street

July 5, 2017
Tulsa, Oklahoma. 1921. A wave of racial violence destroys an affluent African-American community, seen as a threat to white-dominated American capitalism.

Teaching Black Women’s Self-Care during Jim Crow

October 6, 2021
Maryrose Reeves Allen founded a wellness program at Howard University in 1925 that emphasized the physical, mental, and spiritual health of Black women.

Far From Folsom Prison: More to Music Inside

November 29, 2022
Johnny Cash wasn't the only superstar to play in prisons. Music, initially allowed as worship, came to be seen as a rockin' tool of rehabilitation.

Editors’ Picks of 2022

December 25, 2022
Poetry, Polonius, and Prison: a collection of this year’s greatest hits from JSTOR Daily.

The post An Editor Bids JSTOR Daily Farewell appeared first on JSTOR Daily.


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