Table of contents

All stories

The Pussyhat’s Identity Crisis

Critics maintain that the now iconic pink caps are too stereotyped and exclusionary. Can an inclusive symbol of women’s rights be found?
Identity Politics

Europe’s Destructive Spirals of Distrust

An ideological deadlock between nativism and Islamism, resulting in an escalating spiral of destructive distrust, is threatening the cohesion of European societies.
Online Identity - Social media sites create relationships of access. A friendship on Facebook is not as much about intimacy as about giving others a role in your identity “performances.”

How Real Are You on Facebook?

Carefully consider who you connect with on social media. Best friends and acquaintances alike contribute to your identity.

Is Gender Unique to Humans?

Evidence from our closest evolutionary relatives suggests that we might not be the only animals with a sense of gender identity.
Two large almond-shaped rocks with cutmarks covering their surfaces lie on brown wood with a small metal coin between them.

How Human Are We?

An evolutionary theorist considers how traits we think of as human may have been shared by other hominins.
A man with long, dark hair tied in a braid holds up a small child to a mirror, which reflects the child’s pensive face.

Finding Our Way Forward—by Remembering

In a personal essay, a mixed-race and Native anthropologist draws strength from his ancestors.
A close-up image features the wrinkled hands of a person wearing a cardigan and printed skirt as they mold clay into a bowl shape.

What Pots Say—and Don’t Say—About People

Archaeologists long abandoned the simple notion that “pots are people”—that people’s identities directly correspond with the pottery they made and used. What, then, can ceramics reveal about past lives?
A person with their back to the camera looks at two large photos of Korean American adoptees against white backgrounds on a dark wall.

Transracial Adoption and the Limits of Love

A Korean adoptee and anthropologist reflects on how studying kinship made her rethink her own fraught family bonds.
Bele Martinique - Bèlè dancers and musicians help shape how some Martinicans envision their future society.

How Black Caribbean Communities Are Reviving an Ancestral Dance Tradition

An interview with anthropologist Camee Maddox-Wingfield explores how practitioners of bèlè on the island of Martinique find agency, healing, and connection.
This illustration represents how Indigenous peoples around the globe, as highlighted by depictions of a few specific communities, are striving to keep endangered languages alive as dynamic sources of cultural identity.

Why Are Languages Worth Preserving?

As UNESCO brings urgent awareness to Indigenous languages this year, a linguist considers whether saving languages is sentimental or critical.
Bhutanese Nepali performers—including Shyam “San” Rai at center—pose at a cultural festival.

How Names Tell Stories of Loss and Resilience

Bhutanese Nepali refugee communities in the United States have embraced an approach to identity that reflects their unique heritage and underscores the power of choosing their own labels.
A mosaic features four angels in white with wings surrounding a man in a central circle - all against a yellow background.

Do Clothes Make a Messiah?

A historian explores how Jesus’ dress was simple—and probably scruffy. There's a reason this still matters.
Bilal works at a night shop on Falconplein, a sprawling square in the north of Antwerp and a short walk from the city’s red-light district. He arrived in Belgium eight years ago from Afghanistan and now works long hours at his cousin’s shop, which is open 24/7. Bilal hopes to move to the U.K., study medicine, and become a doctor.

The Nachtwinkels of Antwerp

In Belgium, neighborhood convenience stores run by immigrants and ethnic minorities are facing prejudice and fines. But these shops are a vital part of a city in flux.
Anglo-Saxon mythologies and culture continue to enchant many who live in the U.K.

Ten Skeletons Bury a Right-Wing Talking Point

Contrary to some popular beliefs, today’s British population does not descend from one Anglo-Saxon heritage.
An elderly woman with short brown hair and glasses wearing a blue, black, and white shirt stands in front of a portrait of a seated woman wearing a blue dress in front of pink curtains in Cyprus.

A Lens on Cyprus Reunification

An anthropologist walks around the circumference of this Mediterranean island, photographing people separated by political conflict and reflecting on the ties that bind divided communities.
how many sexes are there - Stanislawa Walasiewicz won the gold for Poland in the women’s 100-meter dash at the 1932 Olympic Games. Upon her death, an autopsy revealed that she had intersex traits.

What Our Skeletons Say About the Sex Binary

Society increasingly accepts gender identity as existing along a spectrum. The study of people, and their remains, shows that sex should be viewed the same way.