About JSTOR Daily

JSTOR Daily is an online publication that contextualizes current events with scholarship. Drawing on the richness of JSTOR’s digital library of more than 2,000 academic journals, thousands of monographs, and other materials, JSTOR Daily stories provide background—historical, scientific, literary, political, and otherwise—for understanding our world. All of our stories contain links to free, publicly accessible research on JSTOR. We’re proud to publish articles based in fact and grounded by careful research and to provide free access to that research for all of our readers. You’ll find those free JSTOR resources marked with a little “J” icon that looks like this:

Free JSTOR Citation
The same free links appear in the Resources section at the bottom of each story.

What We Publish

Our writers are scholars, librarians, journalists, critics, scientists, and—above all—keen observers of the world around them. We publish weekly long-form feature articles that explore the sometimes-hidden depths of newsy topics. In addition, our daily blog posts explore parallels between existing lines of study and the headlines of the day. We also showcase regular columns by subject-matter experts writing for a popular audience. In general, we like stories that are thought-provoking, reader-friendly, unique, and—most importantly—backed by academic integrity and peer review. In addition, our long form features are fact-checked by an independent contractor. If you think we got something wrong, have a question, or want to sing our praises, we encourage you to contact us.

What is JSTOR?

JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, and researchers, and students of all kind that provides access to more than 10 million academic journal articlesbooks, and primary sources in 75 disciplines. JSTOR is part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit organization that also includes Ithaka S+R and Portico. ITHAKA also provides services for Artstor. You can find out more about JSTOR here and explore all of the open access content on JSTOR here.

The opinions and other information contained in JSTOR Daily stories do not necessarily reflect the opinions or positions of JSTOR or ITHAKA.

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