Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage
When the Poster Promoting the Concert Is as Exciting as the Music, You Know You're Listening to Chicha
The sounds, graphic art and the mestizo lifestyle that goes with the music is the latest revolt of the Peruvian masses
A Look Behind the Peruvian Art of Gourd Carving
With magnificent hand carvings, artisans craft stories of celebration and tragedy into dried gourds—a tradition practiced for more than 4,000 years
A Dozen Indigenous Craftsman From Peru Will Weave Grass into a 60-Foot Suspension Bridge in Washington, D.C.
The ancient technology used lightweight materials to create soaring 150-foot spans that could hold the weight of a marching army
One Way to Visit Bhutan Is By Way of El Paso
After making its debut at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, a temple from the Himalayan kingdom is uniquely reincarnated on a Texan university campus
Why the Story of Cinderella Endures and Resonates
A Smithsonian folklorist follows the ancient tale with a particularly American twist
The Human Right to Speak Whatever Language You Want is Worth Celebrating
With an ever increasing lack of language diversity, There Needs to Be More Recognition of February's International Mother Language day
Listen to the Freedom Songs Recorded During the March From Selma to Montgomery
When MLK called for people to come to Selma, Detroit's Carl Benkert arrived with his tape recorder, making the indelible album "Freedom Songs"
To Limit Pollution, The Chinese Are Faced With Giving Up an Ancient Tradition
For the Chinese, who invented both gun powder and fireworks, foregoing old traditions may clean up the air—just a bit
The Fight for Catalonian Independence Took the Form of a Giant "V" in the Streets of Barcelona
Hundreds of thousands of protestors formed a giant red and yellow V, symbolizing the "Way Forward" and marking the region's national holiday
The Legend of What Actually Lived in the "No Man's Land" Between World War I's Trenches
Born of the horrors of trench warfare, a ghoulish tale of scavengers and scofflaws took hold 100 years ago
The Blockbuster World War I Film that Brought Home the Traumatic Impact of War
The blockbuster silent film <em>The Big Parade</em> is among the first to explore the psychological trauma of war
What Does a 36-Foot-Tall Human Tower Have to Do With Catalan Independence?
An eye-catching protest across Europe is steeped in cultural heritage says Smithsonian curator Michael Atwood Mason
Why the Smithsonian Folklife Festival is Anchoring a 30-Foot Kenyan Sailing Vessel on the Mall
The 10-day-long celebration of global culture, featuring Kenya and China, takes place in late June and early July
LISTEN: Smithsonian Folkways Re-releases Anthology of Indian Classical Music
This Mick Jagger-approved album includes Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan's first recordings released in the West
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