My research lies at the intersection of the history of philosophy, intellectual history, and social epistemology. I am interested in alternative epistemologies of culture and in historical traditions that sought knowledge not only in concepts and theories, but also in narratives, images, symbols, and cultural traditions. My historical work focuses on the interactions between philosophy and the socio-cultural sciences in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with particular attention to American pragmatism, German traditions of cultural thought, and French philosophy.