Dr Rebecca Wright

Assistant Professor

Department: Humanities

I am an Assistant Professor in History, and currently the Principal Investigator of the Wellcome Trust funded Project 鈥淐arbon Bodies: Warmth and Fuelling Health in Britain, 1918 to 2022鈥�.听

I joined Northumbria in 2018, having been a Research Fellow in Future Health at the University of York in the Centre for Global Health Histories. Prior to this I was a Research Fellow in Mass Observation Studies at the University of Sussex (2017) and a Research Fellow on the AHRC collaborative project 鈥楳aterial Cultures of Energy,鈥� Birkbeck College (2014-16).听I was awarded my PhD from Birkbeck college in 2015.

Rebecca Wright

My research has centred on cultural approaches to energy in twentieth century America and more recently Britain. My forthcoming book (Johns Hopkins: 2025) explores the birth of an 鈥榚nergy consciousness鈥� in the United States in the first half of the twentieth century. In addition to focusing on the role of conceptual frameworks in defining energy, I have also looked to the history of emotions, and more recently the medical humanities to better understand our relationship to energy in the psat. I have published widely in this area in journals including, , the , the , and .

I also co-authored (with Hiroki Shin and Frank Trentmann), (Munich: Oekom Verlag, 2019) which examined the role of experts, expertise and international organisations in shaping international policy relating to energy.

My current research is examining histories of heat and fuel poverty. In 2024 I was awarded a Wellcome Trust CDA for the project .鈥� Focussing on the most carbon intensive area of everyday health, heating, 鈥淐arbon Bodies鈥� examines how health became increasingly carbon intensive over the twentieth century. This process was never even and the project will uncover a history of fuel poverty, and the role that experts, community groups, and activists had in redefining heat as a matter for social policy. In doing so, the project seeks to provide a historical context to better understand the challenges of decarbonising the body at a time of environmental crisis and energy insecurity.

Alongside research in energy, I am also interested in the application and impacts of digital methods within humanities and historical research.

At Northumbria, I teach environmental history across the American Studies and History curriculum. I also lead the Level 5 experiential learning module HI5054 鈥淔ieldnotes: Politics and Policy Making in Place鈥� centred around teaching environmental history in the field.

  • Humanities PhD December 30 2015
  • MA July 01 2010
  • BA (Hons) October 30 2009


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