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Beyond Borders: Dr. Christina Anderson’s journey of urban connection

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Dr Christina Anderson
Dr Christina Anderson

In our modern world, cities stand as hubs of culture, commerce, and innovation. Yet, beneath the surface of their contemporary facades lies a rich tapestry of history woven through the ages.

Dr Christina Anderson’s research offers a framework for uncovering the histories of other places embedded in the urban fabric and thereby for seeing ourselves as global citizens, “Not in spite of our belonging to a particular home, but because of the connections of our home to other places.”

Through the lens of history and the power of research, Christina uncovers the threads that transcend borders.  “Antwerp is my focus of study – how it’s connected; socially, economically. Being from three nationalities myself, I’m interested in how all places are interconnected through infrastructure”.

However, this wasn’t a straightforward journey, which happens in many research careers…

An unexpected career break

Christina’s research career began in 2000 at Sotheby’s in London, followed by time establishing her own research consultancy, and going on to have several postdoctoral Fellowships, held at Oxford, followed by an honorary Senior Research Fellowship at UCL.

However, due to her spouse’s sudden illness, Christina took an unplanned career break, the kind of break from which, she reflects, “it oftens takes you longer to find your way back.”

Due to her home situation, Christina needed a part-time, flexible role that could support her career reentry. She returned to research with a Daphne Jackson Fellowship, sponsored by the AHRC (Arts and Humanities Research Council), and hosted at University College London in the School of European Languages, Culture and Society. Her project was entitled, “Merchant Connections: Sixteenth-Century Cosmopolitan Antwerp and Its Transnational Networks.”

During her Fellowship, Christina secured a very prestigious UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship, a scheme meant to develop the next wave of world class research and innovation leaders in academia and business, with an emphasis on impact.

Her UKRI Fellowship relates to her Daphne Jackson research project, still being hosted at University College London, drawing an early but very exciting end to her Daphne Jackson Fellowship.

The essential role of support in returning to research can never be understated, and is a crucial mechanism, “My mentors were instrumental in my return to research. I was really lucky to have two colleagues who wanted to help and were available for advice when I needed it”.

The places we call home

Continuing with research from her Daphne Jackson Fellowship, Christina is exploring how connections between places made in the past live on in the present. “I will offer a new framework for understanding the way in which a city’s history is inextricably bound up with those of the places to which it was connected.”

One such building in Antwerp is a former palace connected to a sugar plantation in Brazil. Christina will create a virtual reality sequence so visitors can experience both places at the same time.

What lies ahead?

Utilising a number of different digital approaches to history and heritage, Christina anticipates 4 years of working with research assistants on sixteenth-century Antwerp. With the possibility of future funding, she will later focus on a city in each of South America, Africa and Asia.

The Daphne Jackson Trust wish Christina the best of luck in her new Fellowship, and her career. Find out more about Daphne Jackson Fellowships

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