Dr Craig Griffiths

My profile

Biography

I am a historian of twentieth-century Europe, specialising in modern German history, queer history and the history of sexuality. I moved to Manchester Met in September 2016, after previously teaching at UCL and Queen Mary, University of London. At Manchester Met I am the co-lead of the Histories of RGSI (Race, Gender, Sexuality, Identity) research group.

I am a co-founder and co-convenor of the History of Sexuality Seminar at the Institute of Historical Research, an associate of the Raphael Samuel History Centre, and a member of the German History Society. Between 2015-2017 I was a public governor at the Tavistock & Portman NHS Foundation Trust (a mental health trust based in London). I am a member of the Queer Contemporary History in German-speaking Europe research network, funded by the German Research Foundation.

My first book The Ambivalence of Gay Liberation, published in 2021, won the Waterloo Centre for German Studies Book Prize. My current book project investigates the history of human rights through a queer historical lens. In 2023, I took up a Leibniz Summer Fellowship at the Centre for Contemporary History (ZZF) in Potsdam to work on this project.

Academic and professional qualifications

PhD History (2015): Queen Mary, University of London

MRes Modern Languages – German (2011): Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies, University of London

BA German and History (2010): UCL

Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2016)

Expert reviewer for external funding bodies

Member of the UKRI Peer Review College (AHRC)

American Historical Review; Contemporary European History; Gender & History; German History; Journal of the History of Sexuality; Memory Studies

Bloomsbury; Cornell University Press; Oxford University Press; HERA (Humanities in the European Research Area)

Membership of professional associations

Associate, Raphael Samuel History Centre

Convenor, Seminar Series in the History of Sexuality, IHR London

Fellow, Higher Education Academy

Fellow, Royal Historical Society

Member, German History Society

Member, DFG research network Queer Contemporary History in German-speaking Europe

Projects

My main areas of research expertise are in the modern history of sexuality, especially queer history, and modern German History. I am particularly interested in histories of gay liberation in the 1970s (and queer and trans emancipation struggles in earlier and later periods); the history of human rights; the history of emotions and of psychoanalysis; and post-Holocaust memory and testimony.

My first book The Ambivalence of Gay Liberation was published with Oxford University Press in 2021. In the book, I reevaluate ways of thinking, feeling, and talking about homosexuality in the 1970s, a key period sandwiched between homosexual law reform in the late 1960s and the HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s. The book won the Waterloo Centre for German Studies Book Prize, and was shortlisted for the Royal Historical Society’s Gladstone Prize. To find out more, you can read a short interview on NOTCHES, watch the online book launch at the IHR, or listen to podcast interviews with the Waterloo Centre and with the New Books in History network.

My second book project explains how and why human rights discourse has been utilised to talk about sexuality, and homosexuality in particular, over the last 200 years. A Queer History of Human Rights is a transnational history with the German-speaking world at its heart. In 2023, I co-authored a German-language article (with Benno Gammerl) as part of the “key texts in human rights history” series convened by the Centre for Human Rights Erlangen-Nuremberg. In the article, we explain what queer history offers human rights history - and vice versa. As in my recent article on “cultures of conservatism”, in which I bring together distinct historiographies on conservatism and on queer history that are rarely connected, I am primarily interested in showing the power of queer historical approaches to rethink twentieth-century history more broadly. The article can be viewed in German here and in English here.

Teaching

A Queer History of the Twentieth Century (BA)

Europe, Nazism, and War (BA)

The Holocaust (BA)

Queer Histories: Modern Sexuality in Historical Perspective (MA)

Supervision

I welcome informal approaches from anyone interested in undertaking postgraduate study at Manchester Met. I am happy to supervise work in the modern history of sexuality, queer history, twentieth-century German history, human rights history, or in many other areas of modern European history, especially histories of social protest and cultural change.

I am the Manchester Met History lead for the AHRC North-West Consortium Doctoral Training Partnership, which offers PhD scholarships here at Manchester Met and at 6 other regional institutions.

I currently co-supervise three PhD students: in History, in International Relations, and in Sociology.

Research outputs