Daniel Defoe, author of Robinson Crusoe, Put in the Pillory

Humiliation, Headaches, and Narcissism

Well-researched stories from Undark, Yale Environment 360, and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.
A view of the New United States embassy in London, England. Circa 1950.

Whatever Happened to London’s “Little America”?

Since the time of John Adams, the first US Ambassador to the Court of St. James, Grosvenor Square has been the locus of the American government in Britain.
American actors and singers Liza Minnelli and Joel Grey perform on stage as nightclub performers in Germany during the Weimar Republic in the film version of the Broadway musical 'Cabaret' directed by Bob Fosse, 1972.

Cabaret Condemns and Shows Fascism’s Sinister Allure

Cabaret’s depiction of a Weimar-era nightclub reveals how easy it is to slip between satire of, indifference to, and complicity with Nazi aesthetics.
A portrait of Lin Yutang beside the cover of his novel, Chinatown Family

The Chinatown Novel That Wasn’t

Examining Lin Yutang’s 1948 novel Chinatown Family, Richard Jean So reveals the ways in which literature is shaped by editorial interventions.
Saguaro cacti tower over Arizona’s desert landscape.

Saguaro Cactus: A Desert Sentinel’s Prickly Plight

The saguaro cactus has evolved to endure dry days and high temperatures, but even this resilient plant struggles to cope with the effects of climate change.
Illustration of carbon capture technology which uses filter technology to remove the green house gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it underground.

Who Owns the Ground Beneath Your Feet?

Carbon removal, a proposed solution to climate change, will require the injection of CO2 underground—but under whose property?
Photo: English crime writer Agatha Christie and her daughter, Rosalind, are featured in a newspaper article reporting the mysterious disappearance of the novelist. 

Source: Getty

Agatha Christie’s Mysterious Disappearance

In December 1926, Christie went missing for more than a week. Where did she go, and what was she up to?
The golden death mask of Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamen, 1950

The Pharaoh’s Curse or the Pharaoh’s Cure?

A toxic fungus from King Tutankhamun’s tomb yields cancer-fighting compounds.
Mammal bones protrude from pit 91 at the La Brea Tar Pits on August 17, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.

La Brea and Beyond

Pits and seeps full of tar and asphalt offer new insights into old ecosystems and cultures.
Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, ca. 1900-1915

Take Me Out to the Class Game: Social Stratification in the Stadium

The private boxes for the privileged few in today’s baseball stadiums are nothing new.