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Professor Brycchan Carey

Professor

Department: Humanities

I am a specialist in the literature and culture of the Atlantic world in the period 1650-1850. I have published extensively on the cultures of slavery and abolition, colonial America, and discourses of science and exploration in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, especially natural history and the early life sciences. My most recent book is The Unnatural Trade: Slavery, Abolition, and Environmental Writing, 1650–1807, which was published by Yale University Press in 2024.

I am currently in receipt of a British Academy/Wolfson Foundation Professorship to work on ‘The Parish Revolution: Parochial Origins of Global Conservationism’. This project explores to the contribution of the clergy to the development of natural history, and their lasting influence on the nature of the conservation movement. You can find out more about the project .

I came to Northumbria in 2016, before which I had taught at Kingston University London for 15 years. I studied English and History at Goldsmiths’ College, University of London, and then took my MA and PhD in English at Queen Mary, University of London. To help develop my scientific understanding, I took a BSc in Natural Sciences with the Open University, which concluded with an ecological study of seaweed species on the Northumberland coast.

I am active within the scholarly community and have been Conference Organiser, Treasurer, International Officer, and, most recently, President of the British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. I have also been President of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment (UK and Ireland) and President of the Literary London Society. I am a fellow and currently a council member of the Linnean Society of London. You can find more information about my research and career, as well as many free resources for studying literature, slavery, empire, and natural history on my .

Brycchan Carey

Campus Address

51
Lipman Building, Room 017
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST

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