Benjamin Martin: ”Defining Culture, Debating World Order: Towards an International History of the Culture Concept, 1935-1990”
- Date
- 7 October 2025, 13:15–15:00
- Location
- English Park, 6-3025 (The Rausing Room)
- Type
- Seminar
- Organiser
- Department of History of Science and Ideas
Higher Seminar in the History of Science and Ideas
Abstract:
Today, the concept of culture is an inescapable part of international relations, from states’ use of “cultural diplomacy” to UNESCO statements on “cultural diversity.” Its significance is often unclear, however, in part because its history is poorly understood. What has been meant by this complex term, and how did it come to play such an important role in world politics? I am currently at work on a book that explores these questions through the systematic study of a key way that diplomats and political leaders have defined and applied the concept of culture: by drafting international agreements. Between the 1930s and the end of the Cold War, states across the world signed hundreds of agreements explicitly devoted to “culture,” including bilateral treaties, regional agreements, and open multilateral conventions.
Using an innovative mixture of quantitative and qualitative methods drawn from conceptual history, the historical study of international relations and the digital humanities, my study charts the global history of these agreements, focusing on cases in which powerful states used cultural agreements in ambitious and controversial efforts to reshape world order. Ultimately, the book asks how different ideas about human diversity have shaped the global organization of political authority.
I will make a presentation outlining the book project as a whole and then discussing the first chapter, focused on the 1930s when the first cultural agreements were signed