Dr Peter Riley
Senior Lecturer in American Literature (Pre-1900)
English and Creative Writing
Peter Riley's research examines nineteenth- through early twentieth-century American literature in relation to labour history, poetry and poetics, and archival studies, with developing focuses on German American literature, abolitionist politics, and race and ethnicity in the United States. He also writes non-fiction, and is particulalry interested in the relationship between creative and critical prose.
His most recent book Strandings: Confessions of a Whale Scavenger won the Ideas Prize for Non-Fiction. An experimental memoir, the book explores his involvement in one of Britain’s most bizarre subcultures: each time a whale washes up on our shores, a fugitive community of human scavengers descends to claim its trophies. Some are driven by magical beliefs; some are motivated by profit. For others, the need is much stranger. Mixing natural history, conspiracy theory, politics, and gore, Strandings was described by Iain Sinclair as “a brave, reckless and engaging performance”, and by Jean Sprackland as a “glorious rollercoaster of a book, whose twists and turns take us again and again to the dissolving edges between reality and mirage.” The book was recently featured as the cover story of the Financial Times Weekend Magazine, and adapted for BBC Radio 4, available here.
His first academic monograph, Against Vocation: Whitman, Melville, Crane, and the Labors of American Poetry was published by Oxford University Press in 2019. It explores how the poetry of Whitman the real estate dealer, Melville the customs inspector, and Hart Crane the advertising copywriter complicates an assumed divide between the work of poetry and other “lesser” or contingent forms of labour. Ousting poetic production from its sanctuary of exemption and repose, the book recasts poetic work as a living, sensuous, though often messy activity that transgresses labour’s emerging divisions and hierarchies.
He has edited Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass for the Oxford World’s Classics series, and is working on two further books: a popular history of fossil hunting, and a project provisionally entitled Another Language/Another America: The German-American Renaissance 1848-1871, for which he was recently awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship.
Biography:
Peter (re-) joined Exeter after spending two years as Associate Professor in Poetry and Poetics at Durham University. Before that, between 2014-2020, he was Lecturer and then Senior Lecturer in American Literature at Exeter. Before that he was an Early Career Fellow in American Literature at Oxford. He received his PhD from Cambridge in 2012.