Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Music
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/3a/ae/4b/3aae4bfd-c0ce-aa91-9f21-7755f9154a70/mza_16699497940227613068.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
History-in-the-Now Conversations!
Paul Zanazanian
15 episodes
6 days ago
In this podcast series, Paul Zanazanian, author and Associate Professor at McGill University, explores what history is, what it can do, and how people use it in their everyday lives. What is unique about this series is that Zanazanian engages in conversations with scholars and other professionals who do not work in any field directly related to history but — as shall be discovered — hold valuable insights about history’s worth and relevance. The podcast is inspired by Zanazanian’s book, Historical Consciousness and Practical Life: A Theory and Methodology, which examines history’s life uses.
Show more...
History
RSS
All content for History-in-the-Now Conversations! is the property of Paul Zanazanian and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In this podcast series, Paul Zanazanian, author and Associate Professor at McGill University, explores what history is, what it can do, and how people use it in their everyday lives. What is unique about this series is that Zanazanian engages in conversations with scholars and other professionals who do not work in any field directly related to history but — as shall be discovered — hold valuable insights about history’s worth and relevance. The podcast is inspired by Zanazanian’s book, Historical Consciousness and Practical Life: A Theory and Methodology, which examines history’s life uses.
Show more...
History
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_episode/42791820/42791820-1760732847601-b1d92d28200d3.jpg
INVITED GUEST: Dr. Constantine Soulellis, Associate Professor, McGill University
History-in-the-Now Conversations!
1 hour 20 minutes 3 seconds
3 weeks ago
INVITED GUEST: Dr. Constantine Soulellis, Associate Professor, McGill University

Constantine (Dean) Soulellis is a physician currently residing in Montreal, Quebec, Canada with his two sons. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in Physiology from McGill University in 1998 and went on to complete a medical degree there (2002), as well as a residency in Internal Medicine (2005) followed by a Gastroenterology specialty (2007) and a subspeciality in Advanced Therapeutics/Biliary (2008). He is currently a staff clinician as well as Associate Professor of Medicine at the McGill University Health Center and remains highly active in medical education and clinical teaching, having participated in the postgraduate national gastroenterology curriculum redesign of 2018, the McGill Gastroenterology Residency Program Director for 9 years as well as current Gastroenterology Competence Committee Chairperson. In his spare time Soulellis is an avid drummer and represented painter and enjoys recreational boxing/MMA and skateboarding.

REFERENCING FOR CITATION PURPOSES: Zanazanian, P. (Host) & Soulellis, C. (Guest). (2025, October) How history lives within us: Associate Professor Constantine Soulellis from McGill University talks history.History in the Now Conversations. https://historyinthenow.com/podcast/

History-in-the-Now Conversations!
In this podcast series, Paul Zanazanian, author and Associate Professor at McGill University, explores what history is, what it can do, and how people use it in their everyday lives. What is unique about this series is that Zanazanian engages in conversations with scholars and other professionals who do not work in any field directly related to history but — as shall be discovered — hold valuable insights about history’s worth and relevance. The podcast is inspired by Zanazanian’s book, Historical Consciousness and Practical Life: A Theory and Methodology, which examines history’s life uses.