Historically Thinking
Historically Thinking
Cultural History
0:00
-44:16

Cultural History

Marco Cabrera-Geserick explains the basics

Originally published on September 30, 2015 (Episode 32)

Introduction

“Culture” is one of the slipperiest words in the English language—defined in multiple, sometimes contradictory ways. What, then, is cultural history?

Marco Cabrera Geserick joins Al Zambone to explore the meaning and methods of cultural history. Together they probe how historians define and study culture, and what cultural history can tell us that political or social history might not.


About the Guest

Marco Cabrera-Geserick is (as of 2025) a historian and Assistant Professor in the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies at Northern Arizona University. At the time of the recording he was a Visiting Assistant Professor at Augustana College. His work focuses on the intersections of politics, ideas, and culture.


For Further Investigation


Listen & Discuss

What does “culture” mean to you? How should historians study it, and how does cultural history differ from other forms of historical inquiry? Share your views in the comments, and send this episode to someone interested in history, sociology, or anthropology.

Share


Don’t miss an episode—subscribe to join conversations that explore every corner of historical thinking.

Discussion about this episode

User's avatar