
Professor Timothy Baker
Personal Chair
- About
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Biography
Timothy C. Baker received an AB in Cognitive Science from Vassar College in 1999 and a PhD in English Literature from the University of Edinburgh in 2007. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities from 2007-08, and joined the University of Aberdeen in 2009. His research and teaching centres on Scottish and contemporary literature, with a particular focus on the environmental humanities and animal studies.
External Memberships
Scottish Universities International Summer School, Board Member
British Association for Contemporary Literary Studies, Elected Ordinary Member
External examiner: University of the Highlands and Islands.
Latest Publications
New Forms of Environmental Writing: Gleaning and Fragmentation
Bloomsbury Academic, London. 256 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksMapping Escape: Geography and Genre
Scottish Writing After Devolution. Pittin-Hédon, M., Manfredi, C., Hames, S. (eds.). Edinburgh University Press, pp. 123-140, 18 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: ChaptersA Different World: Dorothy K. Haynes’s Domestic Horror
Gothic Studies, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 70-83Contributions to Journals: ArticlesReading My Mother Back: A Memoir in Childhood Animal Stories
Goldsmiths Press. 168 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksThe Gender Politics of Trees
Nonhuman Agencies in the Twenty-First-Century Anglophone Novel. Liebermann, Y., Rahn, J., Burger, B. (eds.). Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 169-186, 18 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79442-2_9
- Research
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Research Overview
Professor Baker specialises in Scottish and contemporary literature (primarily fiction, but poetry and creative nonfiction too!). He is the author of George Mackay Brown and the Philosophy of Community (2009), Contemporary Scottish Gothic: Mourning, Authenticity, and Tradition (2014), Writing Animals: Language, Suffering, and Animality in Twenty-First-Century Fiction (2019), New Forms of Environmental Writing: Gleaning and Fragmentation (2022) and Reading My Mother Back: A Memoir in Childhood Animal Stories (2022). Other research and teaching interests include genre and space in twentieth-century women's fiction, climate change and environmental crisis, and contemporary posthuman, queer, and feminist theories. Recent and forthcoming articles and papers include discussions of queer temporality in school detective fiction, ecocriticism and the body, and community in Scottish fiction, and studies of authors such as Michel Faber, Dorothy K. Haynes, and Muriel Spark. Current PhD supervision includes projects on ecofeminism, literary animal studies, the Scottish literary renaissance, autism in literature, contemporary Gothic, and Kazuo Ishiguro. He welcomes inquiries from potential research students interested in working in related areas,, particularly projects on contemporary and experimental literature, ecocriticism, animal studies, and queer studies.
Research Areas
Accepting PhDs
I am currently accepting PhDs in English.
Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.
Research Specialisms
- English Literature
- Women's Studies
- Scottish Literature
- North American Literature Studies
- Environmentalism
Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.
Current Research
Professor Baker's most recent book-length projects are a monograph on ideas of gleaning and fragmentation in contemporary environmental writing and a memoir focused on children's animal stories. He is also working on shorter projects on ecocriticism, community, and utopia, with an increasing interest in the blue humanities.
Supervision
My current supervision areas are: English.
Completed PhD Supervision:
Pimpawan Chaipanit, ‘A Spatial Analysis of British Women’s Domestic Fiction from Jane Austen to Helen Fielding’ (2019)
Hyginus Eze, 'Social Space in Third-Generation Nigerian Novels’ (2019)
Rebecca Langworthy, 'Genre and Audience: The Development of Adult Fantasy in the Work of George MacDonald' (2018)
Rachel Smillie, 'The Lady Vanishes: Women Writers and the Development of Detective Fiction' (2014)
Brenda Ebersole, 'The Novels of Barbara Kingsolver: A Case Study in Transnational American Literature' (2014)
Current PhD Students:
Christina Connors
Ines Kirschner
Sarinah O'Donoghue
Chomploen Pimphakorn
Graham Stephen
- Teaching
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Courses
- Publications
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The Art of Losing: The Place of Death in Writer's Memoirs
Life Writing. Bradford, R. (ed.). Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 219-233, 15 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: ChaptersThe (Neuro)-Aesthetics of Caricature: Representations of Reality in Bret Easton Ellis's Lunar Park
Poetics Today, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 471-515Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-2009-003
George Mackay Brown and the Philosophy of Community
Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, United Kingdom. 192 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksIan Macpherson's Writing of the Disaster
International Review of Scottish Studies, vol. 33, pp. 61-86Contributions to Journals: ArticlesThe Whole is the Untrue: Experience and Community in The Sluts
Dennis Cooper. Hegarty, P., Kennedy, D. (eds.). Sussex Academic Press, pp. 52-67, 16 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters