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Outstanding Guyanese |
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Dr. Richard Drayton
University Senior Lecturer
in Imperial and extra-European History since 1500
Fellow, Tutor and Director of Studies in History,
Corpus Christi College
Director of Graduate Training (2005-7)
Richard Drayton's research is
centred on the transnational histories of Imperialism and
Anti-imperialism. He looks in particular at the political,
economic, and cultural histories of British and French
expansion, and at the regional experience of the Caribbean. He
is especially interested in the problem, central to all empires,
of what happens at the surface of contact between different
economies of knowledge, nature, identity, religion, or aesthetic
experience.
Teaching
Interests :
He teaches across the range of
all three Cambridge
'extra-European'
history papers:
'The Expansion of Europe, c. 1500
to 1914',
'The West and the Third World,
1914 to the present',
and 'The British Empire and Commonwealth since 1780'. He has
also designed the Migrants option on
'Caribbean and South Asian
Migration to Britain since 1945'.
He is one of the convenors of the World History research seminar
(formerly known as the Commonwealth and Overseas History
seminar).
Areas of
Research Supervision :
Richard Drayton has
supervised graduate students for several years in Cambridge and
at Oxford (1994-8) and the University of Virginia (1998-2001).
He has directed (or shared supervision of) PhD candidates
working on a variety of topics including British public
opinion's response to the East India Company and imperial
expansion in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; the
role of the Free People of Colour in the slave societies of
Trinidad and Dominica; the career of Archbishop Secker; the
environmental history of the British Empire; Imperial reform in
Spain and its Atlantic colonies in the eighteenth century; the
British intellectual response to China; Blacks in London in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; and the cultural history of
exotic fruit in early modern England. He has been examiner for
doctoral dissertations on topics including French and British
natural history in the seventeenth-century Caribbean; the global
history of rubber; the reception of the Description de
l'Egypte, Britain and the cotton south of the United States
before the Civil War, Sir Robert Schomburgk's exploration of
British Guiana, the history of the London Zoo in the
nineteenth-century, and the policing of the Raj in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Chief
Publications Books
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(edited.) CONVERSATIONS George Lamming: Essays,
Addresses, Interviews, 1956-1990 London: Karia Press,
1992.
Articles
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'Anglo-American 'Liberal'
Imperialism: British Guiana and the World since 9-11', in
William Roger Louis, ed., Yet more adventures with
Britannia, London I. B. Tauris, 2005
-
'The Strange Late Birth
of the British Academy' in M. Daunton, ed., The
Organization of Knowledge in Victorian Britain Oxford: The
British Academy, 2005
-
'Putting the British Back
into the Empire',
Journal of British Studies 44 (January 2005):
187-193
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'How Empires Rise', in H.
Swain, ed. Big Questions in History, London:
Jonathan Cape, 2005.
-
'Taking Back the Head',
Introduction to George Lamming, The Pleasures Of Exile
London: Pluto, 2005
-
'The Collaboration of
Labour: Slaves, Empires, and Globalizations in the Atlantic
World, c. 1600-1850, in A. G. Hopkins, ed.,
Globalization in World History (London, 2002), pp.
98-114.
-
'Science, Medicine, and
the British Empire'in The Oxford History of the British
Empire, volume V: Historiography, Robin Winks, ed.,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, October 1999.
-
'A l'école des Français:
les sciences et le deuxième empire britannique (1783-1830)'
Revue Française d'Histoire D'Outre-Mer, t. 86
(1999) n0 322-333, pp. 91-118.
-
'Empire and Knowledge',
in The Oxford History of the British Empire, volume II:
The Eightenth Century, P.J. Marshall, ed., (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 231-252
Public Lectures
-
'American Imperialism in
Comparative Perspective', Arthur J. Throckmorton Lecture,
Lewis and Clark College, February 2007
-
'The Problem of the Hero
in Caribbean History', 21st Elsa Goveia Lecture, University
of the West Indies, March 2004
-
What happens when two
ways of knowing meet? The Elizabeth T. Kennan Lecture at
Mount Holyoke College, March 2003
-
'Global Wars and Nervous
Peaces: Britain, France, and the Origins of the Modern
World, 1659-1815', Plenary Lecture to the 69th
Anglo-American Conference, July 2000
-
'Diasporas of Nature:
Science, Imperialism, and the Environment' City University
of New York, May 2000
Administration
Dr Drayton is a member of the
committees of management of the Centre for African Studies and
the Centre for Latin American Studies, the Smuts, Holland Rose,
and Evans funds. In 2006-7 he will be mentor for the Centre for
African Studies Visiting Fellowships on
Africa and the Atlantic World
since 1500. He is a
member of the Faculty Board and Degree Committee of the Faculty
of History.
External
affiliations
Dr Drayton is Senior Research
Associate of the
Centre for World Environmental
History of the
University of Sussex. He is a member of the Academic Advisory
Committee on the Bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade
of the
British Empire and Commonwealth
Museum. With Megan
Vaughan he edits the
Cambridge Imperial and
Post-Colonial Studies
series of Palgrave-Macmillan. He is a Fellow of the Royal
Historical Society, a member of the American Historical
Association and the Association of Caribbean Historians.
Biography
Richard Drayton was born in
Guyana and grew up in Barbados, where he went to school at
Harrison College. He left the Caribbean as a Barbados Scholar to
Harvard University, going then to Yale, where he wrote his
doctoral dissertation under the direction of Paul Kennedy and
Frank Turner. He also spent two years as a graduate student at
Balliol College, Oxford as the Commonwealth Caribbean Rhodes
Scholar. In 1992 he first came to Cambridge as a Research Fellow
of St Catharine's College, moving back to Oxford in 1994 to be
Darby Fellow and Tutor in Modern History at Lincoln College.
After 1998, he was Associate Professor of History at the
University of Virginia, returning to Cambridge in 2001. In 2002
he was awarded the
Philip Leverhulme Prize
for History.
Drayton believes that it is
important for historians to communicate with the wider public,
and in particular to speak up where their work on the past has
relevance to the present. He has appeared on BBC radio on 'Nightwaves'
and 'In Our Time', has participated in public debates on
Britain's imperial past and present, and has published op/ed
pieces in the Guardian (including
An Ethical Blank Cheque
and
Africa and the wealth of the West).
From
University of Cambridge web site. |
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