June 2022
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FEATURES
Flesh, Blood & Bronze
One sculptor and his team of artists take on the epic project of conveying the century-old conflict through a massive bronze installation
PHOTOGRAPHS BY VINCENT TULLO
Not Far From Kyiv
To residents of Southern California with ties to the Eastern European nations, the conflict feels close to home
PHOTOGRAPHS AND INTERVIEWS BY STELLA KALININA
In a Tight Spot
Conservationists are racing to rescue a delightful coastal animal from rising seas
PHOTOGRAPH BY LAUREN OWENS LAMBERT
TEXT BY MADDIE BENDER
The Real Pinocchio
Forget what you know from the cartoon. The 19th-century story, now in a new translation, was a rallying cry for universal education and Italian nationhood
BY PERRI KLASS
PHOTOGRAPHS BY SIMONA GHIZZONI
Escape from the Gilded Cage
Even if her husband was a murderer, a woman in a bad marriage once had few options. Unless she fled to South Dakota
BY APRIL WHITE
DEPARTMENTS
Discussion
Ethical Collecting
For more than a century, museum artifacts were acquired in ways we no longer find acceptable. How can we repair the damage?
Popular Wisdom
The world’s largest book repository has expanded far beyond its original scope to include sound recordings and digitized collections
Van Gogh in the Grove
A new exhibition of lesser known works during a pivotal time sheds light on his budding genius
Role of a Lifetime
An unpublished memoir reveals how the world’s most famous child actress became a star of the environmental movement
A Brief History of Red Drink
The obscure roots of a centuries-old beverage that’s now a Juneteenth fixture
The Next Clone
Forget Dolly the Sheep. The birth of a mouse named Cumulina 25 years ago launched a genetic revolution


Alexander von Humboldt might not be a name you know, but you can bet you know his ideas. Back when the United States were a wee collection of colonies huddled on the eastern seaboard, colonists found the wilderness surrounding them scary.
episode, we learn how Humboldt—through science and art—inspired a key part of America’s national identity.


In the middle ages, Heidelberg castle was a center of learning, the birthplace of the first university in Germany. Today, it’s a birthplace of a different kind: peregrine falcons.
In its heyday, dynamite was a transformative tool; it could blast rock quarries, excavate tunnels, and demolish buildings with power and reliability never before seen. But it also proved to be useful in some surprising ways. In this special episode of Sidedoor, we team up with the history podcast Backstory to explore two less-typical applications of the explosive: the artistic blasting at Mount Rushmore, and how anarchists used dynamite to advance their political agenda in 1886.