All Culture
- ‘This ground is sacred.’ How a new museum reclaims history from horror.
The new International African American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina, stands on the site where more than 40% of enslaved people were brought to the U.S.
- In a WordAll CAPS or none: It’s a free-for-all on social media
WRITING EVERYTHING IN ALL CAPS IS GENERALLY UNDERSTOOD AS YELLING, our language columnist notes.
- What I found when I finally stopped looking
I needed no convincing the wild native berry was precious. But despite my treks to the woods, it kept eluding me.
- In a WordRuling out overindulgence in capital letters
People don't seem to know what – or when – to capitalize. It's a problem that streches back thousands of years.
- My electrifying experiment in elocution
Today we are awash in a sea of language, but despite its abundance, very little attention seems to be paid to its refined usage.
- Raiders of the last ark: Ford dons the fedora one more time
The latest – and last – Indiana Jones film, “Dial of Destiny,” raises the question: Can we experience action-adventure movie heroism the way we used to?
- Letter from ‘Glasto’: Kid packs, wilderness wipes, and ‘Rocket Man’
The Glastonbury music festival turns a patch of English pasture into one of the happiest places on Earth. The challenge: how to participate, in comfort, with a 2-year-old son and pregnant wife.
- Letter from ‘Glasto’: Kid packs, wilderness wipes, and ‘Rocket Man’
The Glastonbury music festival turns a patch of English pasture into one of the happiest places on Earth. The challenge: how to participate, in comfort, with a 2-year-old son and pregnant wife.
- In a WordHumans, not chatbots, find capitalization tricky
Early European manuscripts don’t differentiate between uppercase and lowercase letters; all letters are the same size and come in only one shape.
- First LookUpcycling movement: How US chefs transform waste into meals
Chefs are turning wasted food into high-quality dishes – from ice cream to pizza. The upcycling movement, which aims to address the problem of food waste in the United States, is growing in popularity as consumers are increasingly environmentally conscious.
- From ‘The Flash,’ reflections on the past, the future, and ourselves
After seeing the latest version of “The Flash,” our columnist considers what we all have the power and freedom to do: Change ourselves.
- ‘Starting From Zero’: After Afghanistan, piecing together a life again
A documentary about Afghan evacuees offers a window on the challenges many migrants face – and the lengths to which they will go to survive and thrive.
- In a WordEnglish has many rules, some of them valid
Some rules of English you know, some you don’t, and – despite what you might have been taught in grammar school – some aren’t rules at all.
- Chu Lai, Vietnam, 1966: My life lesson in leaping
"Our sergeant knew what lay ahead for us new guys – as well as a way to help us face that future," our essayist writes.
- First LookPaul McCartney says new Beatles record features AI John Lennon
The “last” Beatles record is being made using artificial intelligence. Paul McCartney says audio engineers were able to extract John Lennon’s unfinished song from an old demo, decades after the band broke up. The new song is set to be released soon.
- ‘Asteroid City’: Stars, galaxies, and the meaning of life
The latest movie from Wes Anderson features the ingenuity and absurdity he’s known for. But more so than his other recent films, this one is fused with an undercurrent of emotion.
- First LookSilver sleuth: How a German curator returns stolen Jewish heirlooms
A museum curator has made it his mission to return silver objects stolen by the Nazis from German Jews during the Holocaust. Matthias Wagner has already returned 50 pieces to descendants and hopes to double this amount.
- Forget perfect pitch, I had perfect timing – or so I thought
Sometimes you discover you have a true superpower. And sometimes things are not exactly what they seem.
- In a WordSpelling tricks from the days before autocorrect
In the Middle Ages, "proper" spelling was not a cultural aspiration. People wrote words down as they pronounced them.
- First LookLights, camera, no action? Actors poised to join Hollywood strike.
As the Hollywood writers strike enters its sixth week, actors represented by the union SAG-AFTRA have voted to authorize a strike of their own. The guild’s main demand is better pay, and it has given producers a June 30 deadline to renegotiate its contract.