Barrett first taught at the University of Leeds as a lecturer from 1976 and became a Senior Lecturer at the University of Glasgow in 1980.[1][2] While at Glasgow, Barrett co-directed excavations and projects at major Prehistoric sites in Scotland, such as the Pitcarmick excavations in North East Perth.[3] Barrett had contributed a section on Early Bronze Age hoards and metalwork to the 1985 book Symbols of Power: At the Time of Stonehenge, written by D.V. Clarke, T.G. Cowie and Andrew Foxon which had been published by the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland.[4] Barrett further wrote Fields of Discourse: Reconstituting a Social Archaeology in 1988 which continues to be an influential and revisited framework in modern archaeological practice.[2]
In 1994, also during his tenure at Glasgow, Barrett wrote Fragments from Antiquity: An Archaeology of Social Life in Britain, 2900-1200 BC which became an influential text amongst archaeologists studying British prehistory. In the text, Barrett criticised the trend amongst processual archaeologists to focus on the generalisation of past societies into a series of processes, instead arguing that archaeologists should instead think about the individuals of the past, who are otherwise forgotten. He therefore accepts the role that post-processual theory plays in the book, but argued that "this is not a book about archaeological theory", and instead "an empirical study aimed at building a history of the period between about 2900 and 1200 BC in southern Britain".[5]
Research and positions at the Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield (1995 onward)
Barrett joined the Department of Archaeology at the University of Sheffield in 1995 and appointed to a chair in Archaeology in 2001. Barrett further acted as Head of Archaeology between 2002 and 2006, Dean of Arts (2007-2008), and Acting Head of Department of Biblical Studies (2009-2011). Additionally, Barrett was invited as a Visiting Professor to the University of Heidelberg in 2005.[1]
Barrett, J.C. (2013) "Genes and Agents: Closing the Theoretical Gap". In S. Bergerbrant & S. Sabatini (eds.) Counterpoint: Essays in Archaeology and heritage Studies in Honour of Professor Kristian Kristiansen. Oxford: Archaeopress, 575-582
Barrett, J.C. (2011) "The Neolithic Revolution: an ecological perspective", in Hadjikoumis A., Robinson E. & Viner S. (eds.) The dynamics of neolithisation in Europe: studies in honour of Andrew Sherratt. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
Barrett, J.C. and Ko, I. (2009) "A Phenomenology of Landscape: a crisis in British Field Archaeology?", Journal of Social Archaeology. 9(3), 275-294
Barrett, John. C.; Halstead, Paul, eds. (2004). The emergence of civilisation revisited. Oxford: Oxbow Books. ISBN978-1842171660.
Halstead, Paul; Barrett, John C., eds. (2004). Food, cuisine and society in prehistoric Greece. Oxford: Oxbow Books. ISBN978-1842171677.
Andrews, G.A., Barrett J.C. Lewis J.S.C. (2000) "Interpretation not record: the practice of archaeology". Antiquity 74, 525-30
Barrett, John C.; Bradley, Richard; Green, Martin (1991). Landscape, monuments, and society: the prehistory of Cranborne Chase. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0521321280.