Sign Up
Welcome home! Here at WTMX you can make new friends and meet people with the same interests as you. All free and ad-free.
JSTOR Daily
Just for Fun
What Do Chicago Gangs Provide to Their Members? - JSTOR Daily
Confronted with discrimination and violence, gangs evolve and serve members differently, even when patterned after existing groups.
Rodrigo RM likes this.
Utopias, Imperial Horrors, and Bug-Based Dyes - JSTOR Daily
Well-researched stories from Psyche, The New Yorker and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.
Featured Poem from the APN Collection: Lonely Nights - JSTOR Daily
A jarring dose of humanity comes with the 1979 poem by Reva Walker at the Kentucky Correctional Institution for Women.
The Radical Right-Wing Housewives of 1950s California - JSTOR Daily
The mobilization of housewives in 1950s California echoes through US national politics in the twenty-first century.
Mothers Against Mothers in the American West - JSTOR Daily
The participation of white mothers in the “bitter robbery” of Indigenous children from their families was a cruel irony in the colonialist programs of the US and Australia.
Rodrigo RM likes this.
Angry Birds: Climate Change and Avian Migration - JSTOR Daily
Temperature fluctuations throughout the years are affecting bird migration and mating, with sometimes violent results.
Rodrigo RM likes this.
How Can Cities Keep Water Clean Now and in the Future? - JSTOR Daily
As “megacities” grow in Africa and Asia, assuring residents long-term access to clean water may require a multidisciplinary approach.
From Didion to Hesiod: The Center Will Not Hold - JSTOR Daily
Hesiod’s poem reminds us that in the end, we must all make sense of our works and days, with the help of—or in spite of—the stories in our heads.
Mussolini’s Motherhood Factories - JSTOR Daily
In fascist Italy, childbirth, breastfeeding and motherhood were given a hybrid structure of industrial management and eugenicist biological essentialism.
The NYC -> RUS Yiddish Socialist Pipeline - JSTOR Daily
At the turn of the twentieth century, Yiddish became the language of political organizing for Russian Jews, thanks to the flow of literature from New York.