Carlo Ginzburg obituary: The Guardian update: Key Highlights | TheBriefWire
Carlo Ginzburg obituary: The Guardian update
Published 1 July 2026 ยท science
Italian academic and author who challenged traditional approaches with his pursuit of microhistory It would be no exaggeration to claim that the Italian historian Carlo
Italian academic and author who challenged traditional approaches with his pursuit of microhistory It would be no exaggeration to claim that the Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg, who has died aged 87, revolutionised the practice and understanding of history.
In particular, in a series of books published in the 1970s โ above all, The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller (1976) โ he embraced a new field of study called microhistory, which challenged traditional ways of understanding the discipline of which he was part.
Far from the overarching theoretical approaches of Marxism or liberalism, Ginzburg emphasised the edges, the marginalised, the detail rather than the bigger picture. The chance discovery of Inquisition trial documents in archives in Udine opened a way to an understanding of a society and culture through one individual previously ignored by history.
Published: July 1, 2026 โข 10:13 PM IST ยท Updated: July 1, 2026 โข 10:40 PM ISTBy TheBriefWire Editorial Team
Key points
Italian academic and author who challenged traditional approaches with his pursuit of microhistory It would be no exaggeration to claim that the Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg, who has died aged 87, revolutionised the practice and understanding of history.
In particular, in a series of books published in the 1970s โ above all, The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller (1976) โ he embraced a new field of study called microhistory, which challenged traditional ways of understanding the discipline of which he was part.
Far from the overarching theoretical approaches of Marxism or liberalism, Ginzburg emphasised the edges, the marginalised, the detail rather than the bigger picture.
The chance discovery of Inquisition trial documents in archives in Udine opened a way to an understanding of a society and culture through one individual previously ignored by history.