Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage
This D.C. Muralist Finds Pride and Power in Public Art
It’s important for her to be part of the national conversation says Lisa Marie Thalhammer
Cicada Folklore, or Why We Don’t Mind Billions of Burrowing Bugs at Once
The earliest documented examples of cicada folklore come from China
Coming of Age in Poetry: Meet Elexia Alleyne
Growing up in D.C.’s barrio, the young poet remembers a vibrant, tight-knit Dominican community.
When Is Kente Cloth Worn and More Questions From Our Readers
You've got questions. We've got experts
Read Poems Left by Chinese Immigrants Arriving at Angel Island, the 'Ellis Island of the West'
The primary mission of San Francisco's Angel Island Immigration Station was to better enforce the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and other anti-Asian laws
The Quarter-Century Reign of the All-Women Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles
Far from a “girl band” or pop novelty, the group’s success is a hard-earned triumph of gender justice
How Alicia D. Williams Is Reviving Storytelling for Black Children
Williams wanted a different story for her daughter—and for herself. So, she set out to write it
Meet Barbara Dane and Her Proud Tradition of Singing Truth to Power
From Mississippi Freedom Schools, to free speech rallies at UC Berkeley, and in the coffeehouses, her protest music took her everywhere
A Quest to Return the Banjo to Its African Roots
The Black Banjo Reclamation Project aims to put banjos into the hands of everyday people
How a Pioneering Ceramicist Is Using Pottery to Reclaim Black History
Jim McDowell, known to many simply as “the Black Potter,” is a ceramicist who specializes in a craft with deep connections to lost histories
Why the Newly Released 1980s Album 'Sons of Ethiopia,' by the Ethiopian D.C. Band Admas, Is Going Viral
Admas draws from and rearranges “golden era” Ethiopian music with then-fairly-new synthesizer and drum-machine rhythms.
The Life and Death of a Yiddish Puppet Theater
Puppets weren’t a common form of entertainment in Jewish culture
Musician Sunny Jain Reflects on Jainism, Jazz and the Punjabi Dhol Drum
While the originations of the dhol are not known with complete certainty, what is known is that it is a sound that has migrated
In Times of Conflict, How Can We Support the People Who Keep Culture Alive?
A Smithsonian research fellow weighs in on the ways culture proves both vital and resilient
Smithsonian Scholars Pick Their Favorite Books of 2020
This wide-ranging list offers much-needed context for the issues at the forefront of the national conversation
Why Scholars, Cultural Institutions Are Calling to Protect Armenian Heritage
After six weeks of fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia agreed to cede control of territories in the contested region to Azerbaijan
A Native American Community in Baltimore Reclaims Its History
Thousands of Lumbee Indians, members of the largest tribe east of the Mississippi, once lived in the neighborhoods of Upper Fells Point and Washington Hill
Why Sweden’s Ancient Tradition of Calling Home the Herds Is Women’s Work
The spellbinding refrains of the kulning call reflect a tradition that offered women freedom and independence
A Street-Wise Philosopher Explains What It Means to Be Homeless Amid the Pandemic
Smithsonian Folklorist James Deutsch interviews the Washington D.C. man, "Alexander the Grate," about living in the "interstices of the infrastructure"
A Washington, D.C. Couple Shares How the Pandemic Complicates Homelessness
Smithsonian curator James Deutsch speaks with the Metcalfs, who have long lived on the streets
Page 2 of 8