A display at the Kinsey Institute Gallery (Kinsey Institute)
In 1938 the biologist Alfred Kinsey offered to teach a class on marriage at Indiana University—and stepped into a scientific vacuum. With human sexuality a subject never really discussed either inside or outside the academy, people knew…
Carolyn Burke, a Web “diarist” (a proto-blogger), in February 1997. (24 Hours in Cyberspace)
Eleven years ago today, on February 8, 1996, 150 photojournalists across the globe joined to document the vast and vaguely defined new thing called “cyberspace.” Over 24 hours, they photographed Orthodox…
In 1880 Ralph Waldo Emerson delivered the hundredth lecture of his career, at the Concord Lyceum in Concord, Massachusetts. Reflecting on the intellectual restlessness of his peers, the 77-year-old patriarch of American letters remarked, “I suppose all of them were surprised at this rumor of a…
A Vietnam-era U.S. Navy recruiting poster, from the exhibit “Soul Soldiers" (Courtesy of Naval Historical Society)
On April 4, 1967, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., changed both the civil rights movement and the antiwar one by giving a speech at Riverside Church in New York in which he fused the two…
At the turn of the last century, the southern Indiana towns of French Lick and West Baden Springs were bustling resorts, thronged by visitors from all over the country coming to take the waters of the local mineral springs and play at the casinos. Today the two towns sit in one of the poorest…
Frank Lloyd Wright described Kentuck Knob, a fieldstone and cypress dwelling he designed in 1953, as built “so hill and house . . . live together, each the happier for the other.” The house, nestled into a lush hill in Western Pennsylvania, remains out of view until you wend your way up a wooded…
Standing at the Crossroads of the Blues
In his 1949 song “Canary Bird,” Muddy Waters sang, “Well, canary bird, when you get to Clarksdale, please fly down on Second Street / Well, you know I don’t want you to stop flying until you take the letter out to Stovall for me.” And you can still walk down…