Columbia University in the City of New York
Marcel Garboś
István Deák Visiting Assistant Professor

Marcel Radosław Garboś is a historian of social and political thought in the late Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, with broad interests in the comparative history of empires and visions of post-imperial order in the modern world. In 2021, Marcel completed his doctorate in the History Department at Harvard University, where he wrote a dissertation on projects for the geopolitical reorganization of the imperial Russian and Soviet spaces that developed across revolutionary networks in the Eurasian borderlands between the late nineteenth century and the Second World War. His current research investigates the international origins of federalist thought and politics in the Russian Empire, focusing on non-Bolshevik socialist movements that led the struggle for post-imperial decentralization on the eve of the October Revolution. Marcel’s other ongoing pursuits include a genealogy of cross-border weaponized nationalism in the interwar Soviet Union and the Second Polish Republic as well as an inquiry into the transnational formation of concepts of property, territory, and nationhood in the Russian, German, and Austro-Hungarian borderlands before the First World War. His writings on these and other topics have appeared in Europe-Asia Studies, Harvard Review, Rocznik Przemyski, and The Slavonic and East European Review.

In the Fall Semester of 2022, Marcel will serve as an István Deák Visiting Assistant Professor in East Central European Studies at Columbia, teaching courses on self-determination and imperial borderlands in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In 2023, he will relocate to the Kennan Institute in Washington, D.C., to continue working on his project on federalism. Marcel warmly invites students, colleagues, and anyone else with shared interests to be in touch via email.

Marcel Radosław Garboś is a historian of social and political thought in the late Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, with broad interests in the comparative history of empires and visions of post-imperial order in the modern world. In 2021, Marcel completed his doctorate in the History Department at Harvard University, where he wrote a dissertation on projects for the geopolitical reorganization of the imperial Russian and Soviet spaces that developed across revolutionary networks in the Eurasian borderlands between the late nineteenth century and the Second World War. His current research investigates the international origins of federalist thought and politics in the Russian Empire, focusing on non-Bolshevik socialist movements that led the struggle for post-imperial decentralization on the eve of the October Revolution. Marcel’s other ongoing pursuits include a genealogy of cross-border weaponized nationalism in the interwar Soviet Union and the Second Polish Republic as well as an inquiry into the transnational formation of concepts of property, territory, and nationhood in the Russian, German, and Austro-Hungarian borderlands before the First World War. His writings on these and other topics have appeared in Europe-Asia Studies, Harvard Review, Rocznik Przemyski, and The Slavonic and East European Review.

In the Fall Semester of 2022, Marcel will serve as an István Deák Visiting Assistant Professor in East Central European Studies at Columbia, teaching courses on self-determination and imperial borderlands in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In 2023, he will relocate to the Kennan Institute in Washington, D.C., to continue working on his project on federalism. Marcel warmly invites students, colleagues, and anyone else with shared interests to be in touch via email.

Contact Info

12th Floor East, International Affairs Building

   mg4493@columbia.edu
   212 854-4623
  Personal website
logo