Alexander Peacock is a PhD candidate specializing in English-language travelogues produced across the Georgian period, focussing on travellers' depictions of North American British settler societies. He is interested in the extent to which these works framed Anglophone North America as forming part of a wider British Atlantic world, and whether writers' thoughts and arguments about the New World drastically altered across the period of the Seven Years' War to the years after the American Revolution. His research considers themes such as empire, settler colonialism, Britishness, treatment of Indigenous peoples, British understandings of the North American environment and animals, and loyalism.
Publications
Peacock, Alexander and Berthelette, Scott. "Joseph Smith鈥檚 Journal of a Journey Inland from York
Factory, 1756鈥1757." The New American Antiquarian 2 (2023): 28-64.
Conference Papers
鈥溾楢mongst the Howlings of Wild Beasts鈥: Fears of the North American 鈥榃ilderness鈥 and Settler Colonial Dreams in Eighteenth-Century British Travelogues.鈥 Paper presented at the North American Conference for British Studies, Baltimore, Maryland, 10 November 2023.
鈥溾楢mongst the Howlings of Wild Beasts鈥: Wilderness Worlds and Animal Agency in Eighteenth-Century British Travelogues of North America.鈥 Paper presented at the Northeast Conference for British Studies, Halifax, Nova Scotia, 14 October 2023.
鈥溾楢n End Put to Their Race鈥: Travel Literature and the Promotion of Settler Colonialism in 1790s Upper Canada.鈥 Paper presented at the Northeast Conference for British Studies, Lewiston, Maine, 22 October 2022.
鈥溾楪reat Britain will lose this bright jewel in her crown鈥: Travellers in Early Upper Canada and the Post-Revolutionary Uncertainties of Empire.鈥 Paper presented at the 19th Annual McGill-Queen鈥檚 Graduate Conference in History, Montreal (online), 11 March 2022.
鈥淯pper Canada as a Loyal Frontier: Frederick Jackson Turner鈥檚 Frontier Thesis and Representations of Space鈥. Presentation at the East Midlands Postgraduate History Conference: Community and Identity, Nottingham, UK, 12 July 2018.
NTU Postgraduate MA Full Fees Scholarship