Barry A. Vann
Barry Aron Vann is an American author, speaker, and retired dean of Behavioral and Social Sciences at Colorado Christian University. His research focuses on environmental perceptions and religious geography, particularly on the relationship between religious beliefs and environmental views in politicized regions such as Northern Ireland and the American Bible Belt.
Early life and education
Vann was born in Clinton, on March 30, 1960, to Dorothy A. Voyles and Harry Mack Vann, Jr.. According to genealogical sources, he is a distant relative of Cherokee Chief James Vann and comedian Will Rogers. He was primarily raised by his maternal grandparents, Rufus and Vernedith Voyles, in a home without indoor plumbing and heated by a wood- or coal-burning stove. He also spent time living with his mother, stepfather, and siblings in Detroit, Michigan. Vann has attributed his interest in geography to his experiences traveling between these environments.He earned a Ph.D. in Historical Geography from the University of Glasgow, a degree jointly awarded by the faculties of Church History and Earth and Geographical Sciences. He also holds a Doctor of Education in adult education with a concentration in community development from the University of Arkansas, an M.S. in Geography from Western Kentucky University, and a B.S. in Social Sciences from Tennessee Technological University. He received an A.S. from Roane State Community College, which recognized him as its Outstanding Alumnus in 2012.
Work
Vann's scholarship explores the intersection of geography and theology through the conceptual framework of geotheology—the study of the relationship between religious belief and geographic space. This framework was originally introduced by geographer John Kirtland Wright.Building on Wright’s ideas, Vann introduced additional terms to describe how different worldviews interpret the relationship between nature and divine agency. These include geotheomisthosis and geotheokolasis to reflect theological interpretations of environmental events. To capture secular perspectives, he coined geomisthosis and geokolasis.
Beyond geotheology, Vann has contributed to discussions on the interface between historical geography, population studies, and environmental risk. His works examine how environmental and demographic factors influence human behavior and settlement patterns.
Vann’s research also examines how religious leaders influence cultural landscapes through the dissemination of belief systems. Historian Andrew D. Nicholls commented on this aspect of Vann’s work in the Journal of British Studies:
Publications
Vann's academic works include Rediscovering the South's Celtic Heritage; In Search of Ulster-Scots Land: The Birth and Geotheological Imaginings of a Transatlantic People; Geography Toward History: Studies in the Mediterranean Basin and Mesopotamia ; The Forces of Nature: Our Quest to Conquer the Planet; Presbyterian Social Ties and Mobility in the Irish Sea Culture Area, 1610–1690; and Climate Change in History: A Geotheological Perspective, which uses biblical and qur'anic narratives alongside paleoclimatological studies to establish dates for those writings and to examine how ancient societies understood climate and weather.His book Puritan Islam: The Geoexpansion of the Muslim World was selected by Choice, a division of the American Library Association, as a Top 25 Outstanding Academic Title for 2012. A review in the April 2012 issue of Choice described Puritan Islam as "perhaps the best geographical text produced on this subject since 2000" and highlighted its significance in reframing discussions of Islamic expansion in geographical terms. On her show Spirited Debate, Lauren Green of Fox News referred to Puritan Islam as a "fascinating book."