Skip to main content

School of History

  • Home
  • About us
  • People
    • Head of School
    • Academics
    • ADB academics
    • Research officers
    • Emeritus Professors
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors and Honorary Appointees
    • Current PhD students
    • Graduated PhD students
  • Events
    • Event series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
    • Audio/Video Recordings
    • In the media
  • Students
    • Study with us
    • Current students
    • Minoru Hokari scholarship
    • Overseas study tours
  • Research
    • Books
  • Contact us

Research Centres

  • Australian Centre for Indigenous History
  • Centre for Environmental History
  • National Centre of Biography

Australian Centre for Indigenous History

Centre for Environmental History

National Centre of Biography

ARC Laureate Program

  • Rediscovering the Deep Human Past
    • About
    • Advisory Committee
    • News
    • Events
    • People
      • Collaborating Scholars
      • Visitors
    • Collaborating Institutions
    • Contact

Resources

School of History

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • Australian Journey
  • One Hundred Stories

Breadcrumb

HomeProfessor Tom Griffiths
Professor Tom Griffiths

William Keith Hancock Professor of History

Professor of History and Director, Centre for Environmental History, ANU

Chair, Editorial Board, Australian Dictionary of Biography

Adjunct Professor of Climate Research, University of Copenhagen

Professorial Affiliate, Centre for Historical Research, NationalMuseum of Australia

 

Room: 3129, CoombsBuilding

Fellows Rd, Australian National University
ACTON ACT 0200

Phone: 61 2 6125 3345

Fax: 61 2 6125 3969
Email: (tom.griffiths@anu.edu.au)

 

Qualifications

BA (Hons) Melb, MAMelb, PhD Monash, FAHA

 

Biography and interests

Tom Griffiths is a Professor of History in the Research School of Social Sciences at the AustralianNationalUniversity, Canberra, and Director of the Centre for Environmental History at ANU.  His research, writing and teaching are in the fields of Australian social, cultural and environmental history, the comparative environmental history of settler societies, the writing of non-fiction, and the history of Antarctica.  Tom’s books and essays have won prizes in history, science, literature, politics and journalism.  His most recent monograph, Slicing the Silence: Voyaging to Antarctica (UNSW Press and Harvard University Press, 2007), won the Queensland and NSW Premiers’ awards for Non-Fiction and was the joint winner of the Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History in 2008. 

 

Current research

Tom’s current research projects include:

* Antarctic history and policy: An ARC funded investigation into fifty years of Australian engagement in

the Antarctic Treaty System

* Victorian Bushfire Research Project: A collaborative community response to Back Saturday

* Climate and Culture in Australia: Historical research into the history of weather and climate

* The International IHOPE Project: The Integrated History and Future of People on Earth

* Desert Channels: The Impulse to Conserve: An exploration of the understandings of the distinctive

Desert Channels country of south-western Queensland

* Australian Environmental Historiography: Research into the distinctive character of Australian

environmental historiography and nature writing

For further details, visit

 

Current teaching

Supervision of doctoral candidates in the School of History, ANU

National Environmental History PhD Workshop

History@ANU Postgraduate Workshops

Masterclasses in Environmental History and Non-Fiction Writing

Honours courses in Environmental History and Public History

Adjunct Professor of Climate Research, University of Copenhagen

 

Major publications:

* Slicing the Silence: Voyaging to Antarctica, University of NSW Press and HarvardUniversity Press, 2007

* Forests of Ash: An Environmental History, CambridgeUniversity Press, 2001

* Hunters and Collectors: The Antiquarian Imagination in Australia, CambridgeUniversity Press, 1996

* Beechworth: An AustralianCountryTown and its Past, Greenhouse, Melbourne, 1987

* Frontier, Race, Nation: Henry Reynolds and Australian History, Australian Scholarly Publishing, Melbourne, 2009 (co-edited with Bain Attwood)

* A Change in the Weather: Climate and Culture in Australia, NMA Press, Canberra, 2005 (co-edited with Tim Sherratt and Libby Robin)

* Words for Country: Landscape and Language in Australia, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2002 (co-edited with Tim Bonyhady)

* Ecology and Empire: Environmental History of Settler Societies, Keele University Press, Edinburgh, 1997 (co-edited with Libby Robin)

* Prehistory to Politics: John Mulvaney, the Humanities and the Public Intellectual, Melbourne University Press, 1996 (co-edited with Tim Bonyhady)

* The Life and Adventures of Edward Snell, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1988 (co-edited with Alan Platt)

 

Some recent essays and articles:

* ‘A Humanist on Thin Ice: Science and Humanities, People and Climate Change’, Griffith Review, no. 29, August 2010.

* ‘“People must always be given hope’: Dedication to Eric Rolls’, Island, no. 120, Autumn 2010.

* ‘Alice Duncan-Kemp (Pinningarra) and the history of the frontier’, in Libby Robin, Chris Dickman and Mandy Martin (eds) Desert Channels: The Impusle to Conserve, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, 2010,  pp. 24-43.

* ‘We have still not lived long enough’, Inside Story, 16 February 2009.

* ‘“An unnatural disaster”? Remembering and forgetting bushfire’. History Australia6 (2): pp. 35.1 to 35.7.

* ‘History and the Creative Imagination’ [The Inaugural Greg Dening Lecture], History Australia6 (2).

* ‘The cultural challenge of Antarctica’, The Stephen Murray-Smith Memorial Lecture 2007 at the State Library of Victoria, La Trobe Journal, Melbourne.

* ‘Discovering the continent of ice: The place of Antarctica in world history’, [Introductory essay], 2007 Yearbook Australia, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra, pp. 14-24.

* ‘Truth and fiction: Judith Wright as historian’, La Trobe University Essay, Australian Book Review, no. 283, August 2006, pp. 25-30.

* (with Tim Sherratt) ‘What if the northern rivers had been turned inland to irrigate Australia’s “Dead Heart”?’, in Sean Scalmer and Stuart Macintyre (ed.) What Ifs in Australian History, Melbourne University Publishing, Melbourne 2006.

* (with Libby Robin) ‘Environmental History in Australasia’, Environment and History, 10 (2004): 439-74.

* ‘Playing the Professional Australian’, Meanjin, vol. 63, no. 3, 2004, pp. 166-174.

* ‘The Man from SnowyRiver’, Thesis Eleven, no. 74, August 2003, pp. 7-20.

* ‘The Culture of Nature and the Nature of Culture’, in Hsu-Ming Teo and Richard White (eds), Cultural History in Australia, UNSW Press, Sydney, pp. 67-80.

* ‘Light Green, Dark Green: Blainey’s environmentalism’, in D Gare, T Stannage, S Macintyre and G Bolton (ed.) The Fuss That Never Ended: The Life and Work of Geoffrey Blainey, Melbourne University Press, 2002, pp. 53-66.

* ‘How many trees make a forest? Cultural debates about vegetation change in Australia’, Australian Journal of Botany, CSIRO Publishing, vol. 50, no. 4, 2002, pp. 375-389.

* ‘The language of conflict’, in Bain Attwood and Stephen Foster (ed.) Frontier Conflict: The Australian Experience, National Museum of Australia, Canberra, pp. 135-149.

* ‘One hundred years of environmental crisis’, Rangeland Journal, vol 23 (1), 2001, pp. 5-14.

* ‘Cooper Clay’, in Mandy Martin, Jane Carruthers, Guy Fitzhardinge, Tom Griffiths and Peter Haynes, Inflows: The Channel Country, Mandy Martin/Goanna Print, 2001.

* ‘Deep Time and Australian History’, History Today (UK), November 2001, pp. 2-7.

* ‘Going with the flow: Flying Fox and Drifting Sand’, in Marion Halligan (ed.) Storykeepers, Duffy & Snellgrove, Sydney, 2001, pp. 145-174.

* ‘Gallery of Life’, Meanjin, November 2001, vol. 60, no. 4, pp. 85-92.

* ‘Social History and Deep Time’, Public History Review, vol. 8, 2000, pp. 8-26.

* ‘The Poetics and Practicalities of Writing’, in Ann Curthoys and Ann McGrath (eds), How to Write History, Monash Publications in History, Melbourne, 2000, pp. 1-13.

* ‘Discovering Hancock: The Journey to Monaro’, Journal of Australian Studies, no. 62, 1999, pp. 171-181, 257-59.