My current research sets out to build a new account of postwar British cultural history through the first examination of late modernism’s interaction with folk art and anthropological thought after 1945. Entitled 'Postwar Folk: Modernism Anthropological Imagination and the Idea of England', it examines how folk art and anthropology were deployed to critique and reform English national identities during decolonisation. I turn to Peggy Angus's journeys in Indonesia, Aubrey Williams's and Eduardo Paolozzi's work in the Independent Group, Doris Lessing’s documentary fiction, Idries Shah's spiritualism, and Robert Graves's poetry, to understand how an anthropological imagination provided the basis for forms of decolonisation, sexual liberation, and political organisation which flourished in the 1960s.
My wider research interests span architectural history and literary studies, and thinkers such as Judith Butler, Paul Gilroy, David Graeber, Stuart Hall, Fredric Jameson, and Raymond Williams. My recent and forthcoming publication projects include the anarchist anti-imperialism of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, the coloniality of architectural preservation in the Atlantic world, and T.S. Eliot’s imperialist visions of the English countryside.