Graeme Garrard

Graeme Garrard (born 1965) is a Canadian political theorist and writer who teaches at Cardiff University in the UK.

Life and career

Garrard was born to British parents in Toronto, Canada and educated at Trinity College, Toronto, before attending Balliol College, Oxford for his DPhil degree in Political Thought. His doctoral dissertation, supervised by Sir Larry Siedentop and Sir Isaiah Berlin, was on the place of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Joseph de Maistre in The Counter-Enlightenment.[1]

He has taught the history of political thought and political philosophy at Cardiff University in the UK since 1994. He has been a Visiting Associate Professor at Dartmouth College and Williams College in the USA, and was an Instructor in Government at the Harvard Summer School in Cambridge, Massachusetts from 2006 to 2018. He taught for a term at The American University of Paris in 2004 and was a Visiting Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge in 2013.

Garrard is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.[2]

As an undergraduate he served in the Royal Canadian Navy reserve for 5 years from 1985 under the University Naval Training Division (UNTD). He left the naval reserve with the rank of Lieutenant (Navy) in 1990. He was a member of the ship's company of HMCS York in Toronto during this period.

Books

  • Rousseau's Counter-Enlightenment: A Republican Critique of the Philosophes (SUNY Press, 2003). ISBN 0-7914-5604-8
  • Counter-Enlightenments: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present (Routledge Publishing, 2006). ISBN 9780415852968
  • How to Think Politically: Sages, Scholars and Statesmen Whose Ideas Have Shaped the World, co-authored with James Murphy (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2019). ISBN 9781472961778

References

  • at Cardiff University
  • , BBC BOOKtalk 2019
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