June 29, 2026

Best of SAPIENS 2025

Best of SAPIENS 2025

In SAPIENS’ final year of publishing new stories, the magazine honors 10 standout contributions that carried anthropology into the hearts and minds of readers worldwide.

As SAPIENS publishes its final stories, we reflect with gratitude on the remarkable community of anthropologists, journalists, poets, and readers who have made the magazine a home for exploring humanity in all its complexity. In 2025, our contributors wrote about connection and care, loss and return, the voices and conditions that shape us, and the landscapes that hold our histories. More than 3 million readers joined us in this collective journey of understanding. As we close this chapter, the SAPIENS editorial team—Bridget Alex, Amanda Lichtenstein, Ben Schacht, Emily Sekine, Christine Weeber, and myself—offers 10 standout pieces that capture the spirit of what the magazine has always sought to do, illuminate what it means to be human.

—Chip Colwell, Editorial Director

 

Human Rights

Beneath a blue sky with a few wispy white clouds, the glassy, rippling deep-blue surface of the ocean stretches to the horizon.

Home-Carrying—A Repatriation Trip to Vanuatu 100 Years in the Making

By Jenny L. Davis

An anthropologist and poet reflects on a journey of return that tells a larger story about human connection, acts of Indigenous solidarity, and the potential for repair within anthropology.

 

 

CREATIVE NONFICTION

A person wearing a pair of unzipped blue jeans places both hands on their lower abdomen, where a long scar runs from their pubic area to their belly button.

My Errant Uterus

By Monica J. Casper

In a time of heightened threats to reproductive rights, a women’s health scholar and mother of two comes face to face with her uterus.

 

Viewpoint

A beige cylindrical object with lines and marks carved on its surface rests on a soft green surface.

When Wartime Plunder Comes to Campus

By Petra M. Creamer

An archaeologist considers whether students should learn from antiquities looted from Iraq.

 

Crossroads

At the base of a tree with a thick trunk, a shirtless man holds a bunch of smoldering vegetation that gives off a large cloud of smoke.

How Societies Morph With the Seasons

By Cecilia Padilla-Iglesias

An evolutionary anthropologist details seasonal changes among foraging communities—and distills how the fixed political structures of industrialized societies are an outlier in human history.

 

Borderlands

Standing at a lookout spot adjacent to a stone wall, a small group holding a blue umbrella looks across a large body of water at the opposite shore.

Why Do Swallows Fly to the Korean DMZ?

By T. Yejoo Kim

An anthropologist discovers diasporic flights—including her own—that begin at and return to the waters of the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea.

 

Cultural Relativity

A woman pushing a stroller on the sidewalk walks briskly past a large billboard advertising a model who sports a fashionable handbag.

To Raise Children, We Must First Raise Parents

By Gül Deniz Salalı

An anthropologist compares her early motherhood in London with child care experiences in a hunter-gatherer community of Central Africa.

 

Creative Nonfiction

A family photograph in a photo album shows a woman in a white shirt with a purse on her lap sitting next to two young children in red sweaters.

The Day I Heard My Mother’s Accent

By Diane Duclos

In a personal essay, an anthropologist reflects on her family’s dual Syrian and French heritage.

 

Standpoints

A large group of people arranged in rows and wearing the same outfit of a navy-blue T-shirt and a red beanie pose for a photograph outside under a blue sky.

In Human Origins Research, Communities Are the Missing Link

By Jessica Thompson

A paleoanthropologist reflects on relationships between researchers and communities living around sites relevant to human evolution.

 

In Flux

A brown horned bull stands defiantly amid automobile traffic in the middle of a busy street.

Following the Life of an Abandoned Bull in Nepal

By Xena White

A visual anthropologist explores how divine cattle collide with urban realities in Kathmandu, revealing contradictions between ancient values and contemporary lifeways.

 

Borderlands

A horse and another animal graze alongside a dirt road rising across the right side of a photo. The shines on a hazy scene above a village.

Sounding the Border

By Uzma Falak

An anthropologist-poet listens to echoes of laughter and other sounds of crossings in Kashmir.

 

 

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