Dr Simon LaytonLecturer in Early Global HistoryEmail: s.h.layton@qmul.ac.ukTelephone: +44 (0)20 7882 2898Room Number: ArtsTwo 2.10Office Hours: Sabbatical Semester B, 2024-5ProfileTeachingResearchPublicationsSupervisionProfileOriginally from Aotearoa New Zealand, I completed my doctorate under the supervision of C. A. Bayly at the University of Cambridge, where I then lectured in World History for two years before joining the School of History at QMUL. I have also taught at Lingnan University in Hong Kong and at the University of Otago. My work explores the epistemological collision of local and indigenous concepts of maritime sovereignty and environmental custodianship with European imperial expansion in Asia and the Pacific. TeachingI currently teach undergraduate courses in global history, including two modules on ‘piracy’ as a concept, phenomenon, and imperialist discourse from Antiquity to the present. I co-convene the first-year introductory module in global history, and contribute a block on oceanic history to the postgraduate Masters programme. ResearchResearch Interests: My research interests fall within the fields of imperial history, world history, environmental history and the ‘oceanic turn’, with regional focuses on littoral, riparian, and archipelagic spaces across the Indian Ocean and Pacific worlds. My forthcoming monograph (with Cambridge University Press) considers local and indigenous resistance to Britain’s naval and mercantile expansion from the eighteenth century, westwards from the Indian subcontinent into the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf, and eastwards into the Straits of Melaka, Riau Archipelago, northwest Borneo and the South China Sea. My current research plumbs the depths of seaweed cultivation in the early modern world, tracing its production and exchange to explore the intersections of indigenous knowledge and global patterns of trade, politics, and society. PublicationsMonograph: Piratical States: British Imperialism in the Indian Ocean world (forthcoming, Cambridge University Press). Book Chapters: ‘Taonga and Tupaia: Introduction to a Material History,’ in Tupaia, Captain Cook and the Voyage of the Endeavour: A Material History, ed. Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll (Bloomsbury, 2023). Co-authored. ‘Fishing for Pirates: Institutional Violence and the Cook Commemoration,’ in Tupaia, Captain Cook and the Voyage of the Endeavour: A Material History, ed. Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll (Bloomsbury, 2023). ‘Space Invaders: On Dark Matter and the Oceanic Turn’, in Oceans as Archives, ed. Kristie Flannery, Renisa Mawani and Mikki Stelder (forthcoming). Co-authored. 'Primitive Liberals and Pirate Tribes: Black-Flag Radicalism and the Kibbo Kift', Liberal Ideals and the Politics of Decolonisation, ed. Harshan Kumarasingham (Routledge, 2020). Co-authored. Articles: 'Primitive Liberals and Pirate Tribes: Black-Flag Radicalism and the Kibbo Kift', The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 46, no. 5 (2018), 984-1008. Co-authored. ‘Hydras and Leviathans in the Indian Ocean world,’ International Journal of Maritime History 25, no. 2 (2013), 213-25. ‘The “Moghul’s Admiral”: Angrian “Piracy” and the Rise of British Bombay,’ Journal of Early Modern History 17, no. 1 (2013), 1-19. ‘Discourses of Piracy in an Age of Revolutions,’ Itinerario 35, no.2 (2011), 81-97. SupervisionI welcome applications from candidates wishing to undertake doctoral research in any area of imperial, maritime, or environmental history between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, particularly with focus on the Indian Ocean and Pacific worlds (broadly defined). Current PhD students: Max Easterbrooke, ‘Merchant Intellectualism in the British Imperial Tea Trade during the 19th Century’ Past PhD students: Timothy Riding, ‘Producing space in the English East India Company’s Western Presidency, 1612-1780’ (QMUL, 2018) Steven Johnstone, ‘The Role of the Maritime Frontier in the Formation of White Australia, 1850-1914’ (QMUL, 2024) Examined: Anshul Avijit, ‘Visual Culture of the Santals and their Image: Myth, Morals and Materiality’ (University of Cambridge, 2018) Rebecca Simon, ‘The Crime of Piracy and its Punishment: The Performance of Maritime Supremacy and its Representations in the British Atlantic World, 1670-1830’ (King’s College London, 2017)