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Dr Katie Donington

Profile summary

Professional biography

I am a social and cultural historian of Caribbean slavery and its legacies. I completed my PhD with the ESRC / AHRC-funded 'Legacies of British Slave-ownership' project at University College London in 2013. I was a post-doctoral researcher on second phase of the project 'The structure and significance of British Caribbean slavery, 1763-1833' between 2013-2015. My second post-doctoral research post was with the AHRC-funded 'Antislavery Usable Past' project at the Universary of Nottinghan between 2015-2018. I was a Senior Lecturer in History at London South Bank University between 2018-2021.

My research and public history practice have been supported by grants from the ESRC, AHRC, British Academy and Arts Council England. I am a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

Research interests

I am interested in the history, representation and legacies of British Caribbean slavery.

My previous research focused on Jamaican slave-owning families and their impact on the social, cultural, economic and political landscape of Victorian Britain. I was the historian responsible for researching Jamaican slave-ownership as part of the 'Legacies of British Slave-ownership' project during its second phase which focused on who the slave-owners were between 1763-1833. In 2014, the project team co-authored Legacies of British slave-ownership: Colonial slavery and the formation of Victorian Britain (Cambridge University Press).

My work has used micro-historical frameworks for exploring transatlantic slavery, including both local and family history. Local histories of slavery and empire can help us to re-think how we understand historical communities and contemporary identities by bringing the past and present into dialogue. In 2016 I co-edited Britain's history and memory of transatlantic slavery: The local nuances of a 'national sin' (Liverpool University Press) which used a series of case studies to explore these links.

In 2020 I published my monograph The bonds of family: Slavery, commerce and culture in the British Atlantic world (Manchester University Press). My book used the lens of a single extended slave-owning family - the Hibberts - to understand the history of slavery over the course of 150 years. Moving between Britain and Jamaica, it considered how the structure of the family influenced the practices of colonial trade. It also explored how involvement in the business of slavery transformed the structure of the family, particularly in relation to the sexual exploitation of enslaved and free women of colour. The Hibberts used their slave-produced wealth to accumulate cultural capital including collecting (art, books, botany), country houses and philanthropy. The book analysed the relationship between culture and the construction of ideas about race, which were then used to justify the institution of slavery.

My next book is a joint project with colleagues at the Institute of Education, University College London, and is based on our work with the Historical Association training secondary school teachers on new historiographical and pedagogical approaches to teaching transatlantic slavery. Teaching slavery: Critical approaches to Britain's colonial past is contracted to UCL Press and will be published in 2024.

Teaching interests

I have previously taught at University College London, the University of Nottingham and London South Bank University. My teaching included the history of transatlantic slavery, the British Empire, Britain in the eighteenth and nineteenth century, public history, local history and Black British history. I am Deputy Chair for A328 'Empire: Power, Resistance, Legacies.' I am on the production team for A337 which will be a new module on twentieth century European history.

Impact and engagement

Prior to returning to academia, I worked for the Holocaust and Genocide History department at the Imperial War Museum. I have curated several exhibitions including Slavery, Culture and Collecting at the Museum of London, Docklands. I was a project director for the AHRC-funded 'Pathways' mural project at the New Art Exchange. This project worked with local youth groups to create Nottingham's first Black history mural. I partnered with Hackney Museum and Archives on the Arts Council England-funded 'Local roots / global routes: Legacies of slavery in Hackney'. We produced an exhibition, educational resources and a film exploring local connections to slavery. I was an historical advisor for the Colonial Countryside project which examined the connection of National Trust properties to the histories of slavery and empire. I am an advisory board member for Rugby School's project Schools of Empire: Colonialism and Class, 1750-1960 and John Hopkins University / Lloyds of London's Underwriting Souls project . I serve as a co-convenor for the Institute of Historical Research Black British History seminar series.

I have pitched and contributed to BBC radio programmes on slavery and collecting, women’s histories of slavery, and horticulture and empire. I acted as an historical advisor for the BAFTA award-winning BBC2 documentary Britain’s Forgotten Slave-owners. I was a script advisor for CBBC Newsround, writing for a different audience so children could explore how slavery shaped British cities. I have given interviews to Bloomberg News, The Guardian, The Observer, iNews, ITV News and the BBC World Service.

Between 2015-2018 I worked with Yole!Africa, an arts-based organisation in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo on 'Decomposing the Colonial Gaze'. The project was based on an archive of photography produced by the British missionary Alice Seeley Harris during her time in the Congo Free State in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. It used the visual archive as a basis for working with young people in Goma and Lubumbashi to explore the history and legacies of slavery and colonialism. The partners produced an exhibition, educational resources, and a film 'Matata'. This work formed part of the AHRC-funded 'Antislavery Usable Past' project.

Publications

[Book Review] Blood Legacy: Reckoning with a Family’s History of Slavery by Alex Renton (2022-07-21)
Donington, Katie
Slavery & Abolition, 43(3) (pp. 671-673)


The bonds of family: Slavery, commerce and culture in the British Atlantic (2019-11)
Donington, Katie
Studies in Imperialism
ISBN : 978-1-5261-2948-2 | Publisher : Manchester University Press | Published : Manchester


Whose Heritage? Slavery, Country Houses, and the “Culture Wars” in England (2023-11-20)
Donington, Katie
In: Conerman, Stephan; Rauhut, Claudia; Schneider, Ulrike and Zeuske, Michael eds. Cultural Heritage and Slavery: Perspectives from Europe. Dependency and Slavery Studies (pp. 139-166)
ISBN : 9783111331492 | Publisher : De Grutyer | Published : Berlin


Cultivating the world: English country house gardens, 'exotic' plants and elite women collectors, c.1690-1800 (2023)
Donington, Katie
In: Stobart, Jon ed. Global Goods and the Country House: Comparative Perspectives, 1650-1800 (pp. 381-404)
ISBN : 9781800083837 | Publisher : UCL Press | Published : London


Relics of empire: Colonialism and culture wars (2019-07-25)
Donington, Katie
In: Ward, Stuart and Rasch, Astrid eds. Embers of Empire in Brexit Britain (pp. 121-132)
ISBN : 9781350113794 | Publisher : Bloomsbury | Published : London


Local roots/global routes: slavery, memory and identity in Hackney (2016-10-27)
Donington, Katie
In: Donington, Katie; Hanley, Ryan and Moody, Jessica eds. Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery: Local Nuances of a ‘National Sin’. Liverpool Studies in International Slavery (pp. 186-208)
ISBN : 978-1-781-38277-6 | Publisher : Liverpool University Press | Published : Liverpool


Introduction (2016-10-27)
Donington, Katie; Hanley, Ryan and Moody, Jessica
In: Donington, Katie; Hanley, Ryan and Moody, Jessica eds. Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery: Local Nuances of a ‘National Sin’. Studies in International Slavery (pp. 15-32)
ISBN : 978-1-781-38277-6 | Publisher : Liverpool University Press | Published : Liverpool


Transforming capital: slavery, family, commerce and the making of the Hibbert family (2014)
Donington, Katie
In: Donington, Katie; Draper, Nicholas; Hall, Catherine; Lang, Rachel and McClelland, Keith eds. Legacies of British Slave-Ownership: Colonial Slavery and the Formation of Victorian Britain (pp. 203-249)
ISBN : 9781139626958 | Publisher : Cambridge University Press | Published : Cambridge


Britain’s History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery: Local Nuances of a ‘National Sin’ (2016-10-27)
Donington, Katie; Hanley, Ryan and Moody, Jessica eds.
Studies in International Slavery
ISBN : 978-1-781-38277-6 | Publisher : Liverpool University Press | Published : Liverpool