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Dr Jarrod Hore

Dr Jarrod Hore

Research Fellow
Arts, Design & Architecture
School of Humanities & Languages

Jarrod Hore is an environmental historian of settler colonial landscapes, nature writing, and geology, and is currently postdoctoral fellow with the New Earth Histories Research Program, University of New South Wales, Sydney. His work on earthquake geology, wilderness photography, early environmentalism, and the Romantic tradition in the antipodes has been published in theÌýPacific Historical Review,ÌýAustralian Historical StudiesÌýandÌýHistory Australia. His first book,Ìýwas published byÌýUniversity of California Press in 2022.

  • Books | 2022
    Hore J, 2022, Visions of nature: How landscape photography shaped settler colonialism, University of California Press,
  • Book Chapters | 2023
    Hore J, 2023, 'History of the Earth Sciences from the South', in Aronova E; Sepkoski D; Tamborini M (ed.), Handbook of the Historiography of the Earth and Environmental Sciences, Springer Cham,
    Book Chapters | 2023
    Hore J, 2023, 'The Voices of an Eloquent Earth: Tracing the Many Directions of Colonial Geo-Theology', in Bashford A; Kern E; Bobbette A (ed.), New Earth Histories: Geo-Cosmologies and the Making of the Modern World, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 93 - 107,
  • Journal articles | 2022
    Finney V; Hore J; Ville S, 2022, 'Chains of Custody, Oceans of Instability: The Precarious Logistics of the Natural History Trade', JOURNAL OF WORLD HISTORY, 33, pp. 103 - 137,
    Journal articles | 2022
    Hore J, 2022, 'Settlers in Earthquake Country: Apprehending Instability in New Zealand and California', Pacific Historical Review, 91, pp. 1 - 32,
    Journal articles | 2021
    Bashford A; Chakrabarti P; Hore J, 2021, 'Towards a modern history of Gondwanaland', Journal of the British Academy, 9s6, pp. 5 - 26,
    Journal articles | 2019
    Hore J, 2019, 'Capturing terra incognita: Alfred burton, ‘maoridom’ and wilderness in the king country', Australian Historical Studies, 50, pp. 188 - 211,
    Journal articles | 2017
    Hore J, 2017, '‘Beautiful Tasmania’: environmental consciousness in John Watt Beattie’s romantic wilderness', History Australia, 14, pp. 48 - 66,
  • Other | 2024
    Hore J, 2024, A Golden Age of Women’s Botany – Flora's Fieldworkers: Women and Botany in Nineteenth-Century Canada, ,
    Other | 2022
    Hore J, 2022, Wetlands in a Dry Land: More-Than-Human Histories of Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, ,
    Other | 2021
    Hore J, 2021, Empire’s Tracks: Indigenous Nations, Chinese Workers, and the Transcontinental Railroad, ,
    Other | 2020
    Hore J, 2020, Pete Minard on scientific practice, changing environments and species acclimatisation, Informa UK Limited, ,
    Other | 2020
    Hore J, 2020, The Convict Valley: The Bloody Struggle on Australia's Early Frontier, ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, ,
  • Media | 2023
    Hore J, 2023, A Pulsing Account of the Earth and its Humans, ,

Marilyn Lake Prize for the best book in Australian Transnational History. Australian Historical Association, 2023.

Donna Coates Prize for the best first book to investigate Australia, Canada, and/or Aotearoa New Zealand. Australian, Canadian, and New Zealand Studies Network, 2022.ÌýÌý

Shortlisted for the New South Wales Premier's History Awards (General Category), 2023.

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