PROFILE


BENJAMIN VANWAGONER
bdv2115@columbia.edu


Benjamin VanWagoner lives in New York and teaches at Columbia University. He is the author of Imperial Ventures: Maritime Drama and the Invention of Risk (Penn Press, 2025). His writing on on enslavement, piracy, oceans, and colonialism has appeared in several major journals and edited collections. With Jane Hwang Degenhardt, he was co-editor of “Local Oceans,” a special issue of the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies

He has taught Shakespeare, postcolonial and world literature, Romanticism, theory and criticism, oceanic studies, and composition at Columbia University; Baruch College, CUNY; Taconic Correctional Facility (NY) and Orange High School (NJ). From 2009–11, he taught high school math in St.Louis.

Two book projects are underway. One, “Imaginative Hydrography,” is a postcolonial examination of the creation of not-quite-real places through late 17th-century literary technologies of oceanic reckoning. The other, “Bad Shakespeare,” is a public-facing project that playfully deconstructs presumptions of William Shakespeare’s “greatness” in the canon, scholarship, and popular culture.




CV


Education
Ph.D. English & Comp. Lit.
Columbia University (2018)

M.A. English & Comp. Lit.
Columbia University (2012)

B.A. Economics, English
University of Michigan (2009)


Books,
Articles,
& Essay
Imperial Ventures: Maritime Drama and the Invention of Risk 
(Penn Press, 2025)



“Shakespeare, Pixelated: Three Experiments with Scale” in Early Modern Scale, ed. Caro Pirri and Jennifer Waldron (under review at EUP for 2026)

“Jurisdiction: Oceanic Erasure and Indigenous Subjection in Dryden’s Amboyna Water & Cognition in Early Modern English Literature ed. Steve Mentz and Nic Helms (AUP, 2024), 257–282

“Local Oceans: New Perspectives on Colonial Geographies,” a special issue of the Journal of Early Modern Cultural Studies 22, no. 2 (Spring 2022):1–151
co-edited with Jane Hwang Degenhardt

“Perilous Networks: Maritime News in The Merchant of Venice,” Shakespeare Quarterly 71, no. 1 (Spring 2020): 1–28

“Capillary Obligations: Fletcher’s Island Princess and the Global Debts of the East India Company,” in Early Modern Debts, 1550–1700 ed. Laura Kolb and George Oppitz-Trotman (Palgrave, 2020), 209–31

“Pirate Economics in Daborne’s A Christian Turned Turk,” Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 59, no. 2 (Spring 2019): 305–24


Public
Work
“What is a ‘Student’ Politics?” Public Books (2024)

“Literature Humanities: A Guide for New Teachers” co-edited with Will Glovinsky, Center for the Core Curriculum, Columbia University (2023)

“Taconic Correctional Facility Teaching Handbook,” Mellon Foundation, Justice-in-Education Initiative, Columbia University (2018)

Early Modern Futures: an online exhibition and digital collection, maintained by the Columbia Rare Book and Manuscript Library (2015)


Honors &
Awards
John Carter Brown Long-Term Research Fellowship (2025)

Newberry Library Long-Term Research Fellowship (2025; NEH grant defunded)

Folger Institute Research Fellowship (2023)

Finalist, Graduate Student Core Preceptor Award (2018)

GSAS Teaching Scholars Competition, Course: “Oceanic Shakespeare”(2017)

Mellon Interdisciplinary Fellowship, INCITE (2016–2018)

Fellow, Office of Academic Diversity, Columbia University (2015–6)

MLA Connected Academics Fellowship (public humanities, 2015–6)

Archival Research Grant for India Office Records, British Library (2015)

Folger Institute Grant for “Researching the Archive” (2014)

The Rachel-Wetzsteon Prize (for M.A. thesis, 2012) 

Marjorie Hope Nicolson Fellowship in the Humanities (2011–2)


Recent Talks “Bad Shakespeare,” The Columbia Shakespeare Seminar
(2026)

“Contingency: The State of Our Field,” Shakespeare Futures Panel, SAA Denver (2026)

“Imperial Failure and the Aesthetics of English Theater,” Renaissance Society of America Annual Meeting, Boston (2025)

“Why is Shakespeare in the Park?” Shakespeare Association of America, Boston (2025)

“Local Oceans / Anti-Colonial Geographies,” Renaissance Society of America, Puerto Rico (2023)

“The ‘Berth’ of Britain, an Empire in Three Voyages,” Fordham University, London
Program; National Maritime Museum (2023)

“Jurisdiction: Erasure and Subjection in Dryden’s Amboyna,” Shakespeare Association of America (online, 2021)

“Capillary Imagination: Oceanic Debt in Fletcher’s The Island Princess,” Shakespeare
Society of America (circulated online, 2020)

“Pirate Encounters: Negotiating Risk in Shakespeare and Early East India Company Accounts,” University of Hong Kong, School of English Seminar Series, Hong Kong (2019)



TeachingLiterature Humanities I & II
Columbia University
2020–2026

Postcolonial Shakespeares
Baruch College, CUNY
2022

Counter-cultural Romanticism
Baruch College, CUNY
2020

World Literature & Form
Bard Early Colleges
2019–2020

Great Works of Literature I & II
Baruch College, CUNY
2018–2019

Global Shakespeare (/w Jean Howard)
Taconic Correctional Facility
2018

Literature Humanities I & II
Columbia University
2017–2018

Literary Texts & Critical Methods
Columbia University
2015

Renaissance Taboo: Sex Tragedies, Witches, and Betrayal Plots
Barnard College
2014–2015

University Writing
Columbia University
2013–2015

Algebra & Advanced Algebra
Soldan High School, St. Louis
2009–2011


Professional
Affiliations
Shakespeare Association of America

Renaissance Society of America

American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies

Modern Language Association

Justice-in-Education Initiative          







Last Updated 24.10.31
SELECTED PROJECTS








Image: Stockholm, Sweden, the Östersjön
Fujifilm XT-1 XF35mmF2 R WR 53mm f7.1 1/105s


1. Imperial Ventures: Maritime Drama and the Invention of Risk
University of Pennsylvania Press (2025)
Imperial Ventures links drama and empire studies to demonstrate that performances of maritime peril on the London stage normalized a new sense of economic uncertainty--the concept we now call risk. Research for the project was funded by a Mellon Interdisciplinary Fellowship as well as grants for archival work at the India Office Records, Caird Library, and The National Archives (UK).

“This excellent and erudite book reconsiders early modern maritime drama in terms of imperialism and colonial expansion, brilliantly bringing together new developments in critical thinking about race, slavery, economic risk, and related areas. Anyone interested in oceanic cultures, early modern globalization, ecological imperialism, or the blue humanities should read this book!"         Steve Mentz (St. Johns Univeristy)

"Imperial Ventures is a path-breaking study of early modern postcolonialism, examining how risk animated both economic discourses and dramatic representations of peril at sea. The strength of this book lies in its fresh readings of familiar plays as they dramatize the risks and challenges of the new maritime economy buttressing England’s imperialist drives.”
Jyotsna G. Singh (Michigan State University)

"In the midst of twenty-first-century refugee crises, climate migrations, and supply-chain volatility, Benjamin VanWagoner’s study of the early modern history of maritime risk and theatrical performance is both timely and keenly illuminating. Offering incisive case studies of a corpus of maritime plays and venturing documents, this provocative book demonstrates the theater’s contributions to a ‘cultural archaeology’ of risk punctuated by shipwreck, pirates, enslavement, and subjection."
Jane Hwang Degenhardt (UMass Amherst)




Image: National Archaelogical Museum, Athens
Fujifilm XT-1 XF35mmF2 R WR 53mm f2 1/60s


2. Teaching: Literature Humanities I & II
Columbia University
2020–2026

The foundational course of the Columbia College Core Curriculum for nearly one-hundred years. In seminars of 22 students, we trace the arcs of literate culture around the Mediterranean through its development in the Ancient Near East, through 5th-century Athens and Augustan Rome, to Florence and the European Renaissance, and into the colonial contexts of Brazil, Martinique, and America. An interdisciplinary course, ranging and critical, that celebrates the power of discussion and collective action.

Enheduanna, Gilgamesh, Genesis, The Iliad and Odyssey, Sappho, Aeschylus, Plato, Song of Songs, Apuleius, The Gospel of John, Augustine, The Qur’an, Ibn Arabi, Dante, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Sor Juana, Machado de Assis, Césaire, Morrison, and often more.

I’ve taught nearly 1000 hours of Lit Hum, and write recommendations for 40+ students within a close-knit, supportive intellectual community that spans cohorts. 



Image:Aberdeen Harbor, Hong Kong
Apple iPhone X 70mm f2.4 1/60s


3. “Imaginative Hydrography: Oceanic Fictions of the Early Modern Global Anglophone” (Monograph-in-Progress)

By the mid-seventeenth century, English writers, merchants, and statesmen were constructing oceanic fictions across the globe. They used sensational names like “the Northwest Passage” or “Novaya Zemlya,” “Patagonia” or “the Spice Islands”; these were places suspended--not quite real--between their technical and literary representations. 

“Imaginative Hydrography” subverts the English sensationalism of distant places imagined as foreign, exotic, or incomprehensible, re-orienting Edward Said’s postcolonial sense of “imaginative geography” toward the early modern sea to examine how English literature and drama—alongside nautical charts, navigational manuals, and colonial accounts—“created” maritime locales in order to make them available for exploration and exploitation.

Early parts of this work have been published in the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies (”Local Oceans”) and as an essay on Dryden’s Amboyna and the Malay Archipelago (Watery Cognition). The project has been awarded Long Term Fellowships for research from the Newberry and John Carter Brown Libraries.




Image: Car Boot Sale, Princess May School, London
Ilford XP2 B&W Single Use Camera, 35mm


4. “Bad Shakespeare” (Monograph-in-Progress)
A public-facing book that examines the cultural and political efficacy of Anglophone literature by questioning some of its essential premises. Each of its short essays takes up a context in which presumptions of William Shakespeare’s uniform “greatness” have had perplexing, even damaging impact. 

This project explores the Shakespeare of Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Taming of the Shrew, Henry VIII, and Pericles; it reads not Henry IV, but Henry VI. It queries Shakespeare’s unshakeable position in “great books” programs, his regular co-authorship, the popularity of Shakespeare in prison education and performance, the American phenomenon of “Shakespeare in the park,” and the startling humanity of Shakespearean character.

The project’s direction is fueled equally by the affordances of new formalism and urgent concerns about the role of the Anglophone canon in the resurgence of far right, white supremacist movements in the United States and Britain. In this way, while “Bad Shakespeare” is skeptical of literary attachment, it is also a fundamentally optimistic book about our discipline’s central figure.

All images © Benjamin VanWagoner