My research interests centres around migration, mobility and transnational lives in the British Empire. My interdisciplinary project, in partnership with the National Trust (supervised by Dr Yasmin Khan and Dr Christo Kefalas), focuses on the global connections of Rudyard Kipling’s (1865-1936) personal collection of books, art, furniture and decor held at his house, ‘Bateman’s’. Kipling traversed the British Empire and beyond: he travelled, wrote and collected extensively, touching six continents, living in four. The project historicises Kipling for the first time as a migrant and historical agent, and his country estate as a transnational space and nodal point of empire, newly envisaging Bateman’s as a globally connected site intrinsic to producing fin-de-siècle understandings of the racial other, building and producing the imaginative empire.
I did my undergraduate degree in History at the University of Warwick (2016-2019) and an MSc in Migration Studies at the University of Oxford (2019-2020). I worked as a researcher for history podcasts on the history of slavery and empire at Broccoli Productions prior to starting my DPhil in 2021. I am grateful for the support of the AHRC OOC DTP and Baillie Gifford.