Photo caption Poet T. S. Eliot’s life and passions are revealed. John Cuneo Fall 2016 Volume 37, Issue 4 SUBSCRIBE FOR HUMANITIES MAGAZINE PRINT EDITION Browse all issues Sign up for HUMANITIES Magazine newsletter Also in this issue The 2015 National Humanities Medalists Twelve of Our Finest Humanities Staff Rudolfo Anaya 2015 National Humanities Medalist Rigoberto González José Andrés 2015 National Humanities Medalist Michael Ruhlman Ron Chernow 2015 National Humanities Medalist Aaron MacLean Louise Glück 2015 National Humanities Medalist Steve Moyer Terry Gross 2015 National Humanities Medalist Amy Lifson Wynton Marsalis 2015 National Humanities Medalist Eugene Holley Jr. James McBride 2015 National Humanities Medalist David Skinner Louis Menand 2015 National Humanities Medalist Craig Lambert Elaine Pagels 2015 National Humanities Medalist Anna Maria Gillis Prison University Project 2015 National Humanities Medalist Paula Wasley Isabel Wilkerson 2015 National Humanities Medalist Rosalind Early Abraham Verghese 2015 National Humanities Medalist Elizabeth Word Gutting Back When Everyone Knew How You Voted Americans used to cast their support out loud and in public. Paula Wasley One and the Many Should American education treat children as individuals or have the same goals for all students? Peter Gibbon Chicken Soup and Other Remedies An exhibit on American Jews and the practice of medicine at the Jewish Museum of Maryland Paula Wasley The Rise of the Euroskeptic To Survive, the European Union May Need to Listen to Its Own Naysayers Luis Martín-Estudillo How Washington Irving Shaped Christmas in America The famous Knickerbocker was all about Saint Nick. Danny Heitman Before Prohibition, Breweries Made Advertising an Art From PBR to the champagne of beers, Wisconsin brands made their mark. Erica Machulak For More than 100 Years, D.C. Has Drawn People to Protest From veterans to civil rights, a history of marching in Washington. Alexander Stern One-Off Nineteenth-century discovery of gold funerary mask sparked worldwide interest in Mycenaean culture Steve Moyer Executive Function with Shannon Smith She takes on challenging issues in Wyoming. Tamara Linse Try Hawthorne for Halloween, . . . but Leave the Light on Danny Heitman Editor’s Note David Skinner
Back When Everyone Knew How You Voted Americans used to cast their support out loud and in public. Paula Wasley
One and the Many Should American education treat children as individuals or have the same goals for all students? Peter Gibbon
Chicken Soup and Other Remedies An exhibit on American Jews and the practice of medicine at the Jewish Museum of Maryland Paula Wasley
The Rise of the Euroskeptic To Survive, the European Union May Need to Listen to Its Own Naysayers Luis Martín-Estudillo
How Washington Irving Shaped Christmas in America The famous Knickerbocker was all about Saint Nick. Danny Heitman
Before Prohibition, Breweries Made Advertising an Art From PBR to the champagne of beers, Wisconsin brands made their mark. Erica Machulak
For More than 100 Years, D.C. Has Drawn People to Protest From veterans to civil rights, a history of marching in Washington. Alexander Stern
One-Off Nineteenth-century discovery of gold funerary mask sparked worldwide interest in Mycenaean culture Steve Moyer