What Shapes Your Identity? Skin Color? A Surname? Or What’s in Your Fridge?
Related Articles
Race Relations: We’re not born “color-blind”—but does that mean we’re racist?
Are We Born Racist? When that question became the provocative title of a 2012 book by psychology professor Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton and his team at UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, the science seemed to answer that question in the affirmative. Children as young as five months show a preference for people the same race as […]
Making Broadway History With the Play She Never Wanted to Write
Later this month, Young Jean Lee will make history as the first Asian-American woman to have a play staged on Broadway. Yet, what would presumably be a cause for celebration actually makes for a confusing time: the Korean-American playwright will be achieving this feat with her play, Straight White Men. There’s no catch in the […]
Going Chameleon: What a New Material that Changes Color as it Moves Means for Humans
We’ve all probably experienced a moment when we envied a chameleon’s ability to blend into the background—say, after a gaffe at the office holiday party. As it turns out, chameleons change their skin color in response to all kinds of stimuli: physical threats, temperature changes, and the animal’s moods. What if humans could harness that […]