Inga Clendinnen
Inga Clendinnen | |
---|---|
Born | Inga Vivienne Jewell 17 August 1934 Geelong, Victoria |
Awards | Herbert Eugene Bolton Memorial Prize (1988) Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities (1992) New South Wales Premier's General History Prize (1999) New South Wales Premier's Gleebooks Prize for Critical Writing (2000) Adelaide Festival Innovation Writing Prize (2002) Centenary Medal (2003) Queensland Premier's History Book Award (2004) New South Wales Premier's Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction (2004) Kiriyama Prize for Non-Fiction (2004) Australian Society of Authors Medal (2005) Officer of the Order of Australia (2006) Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal (2007) |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Melbourne (BA [Hons], MA) La Trobe University (DLitt) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | La Trobe University (1969–91) University of Melbourne (1956–68) |
Main interests | Mesoamerica European contact with indigenous populations |
Inga Vivienne Clendinnen AO, FAHA, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , (born 17 August 1934)[1] is an Australian author and historian, anthropologist and academic.
Contents
Education and personal life
Born in Geelong, Victoria, Clendinnen graduated from the University of Melbourne in 1955 with a BA (Hons). She married the academic John Clendinnen in 1955,[2] and had two children with him.
Career
She sporadically held the post of Senior Tutor of History at the University of Melbourne from 1955 to 1968, was a Lecturer at La Trobe University from 1969 to 1982, and was then a Senior Lecturer in History until 1989. Forced to curtail her academic activities after contracting hepatitis, Clendinnen retained an association with La Trobe University while working on her memoir, Tiger's Eye.
In 1999, she was invited to present the 40th annual Boyer Lectures.[3] Her lectures were published in 2000 as True Stories.
In the Australia Day 2006 Honours List, Clendinnen was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO), with a citation that read:
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For service to scholarship as a writer and historian addressing issues of fundamental concern to Australian society and for contributing to shaping public debate on conflicting contemporary issues.[4]
Clendinnen's AO award was noted and a motion paying tribute to her contributions was passed, in the proceedings of the New South Wales State Government's Upper House.[5]
Bibliography
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Awards and nominations
- 1988 – received the 1988 Herbert Eugene Bolton Memorial Prize for Ambivalent Conquests
- 1999 – winner of the NSW History Awards, Premier's General History Prize for Reading the Holocaust
- 1999 – Reading the Holocaust was judged Best Book of the Year by The New York Times
- 2000 – New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Gleebooks Prize for Critical Writing for Reading the Holocaust
- 2002 – received the Adelaide Festival Award for Innovation for Tiger's Eye
- 2003 – received the Premier's History Award for her piece "History Here: a Vier from Outside"
- 2004 – New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction for Dancing with Strangers
- 2005 – recipient of the ASA (Australian Society of Authors) biennial medal
- 2006 – Appointed an Officer in the Order of Australia for her services as a writer and historian.[6]
- 2007 – received the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal
Notes
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External links
- Works by or about Inga Clendinnen in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Australian Biography Online
- 1999 Boyer Lectures by Inga Clendinnen
- Clendinnen, Inga in The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia
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- ↑ Date information sourced from Library of Congress Authorities data, via corresponding WorldCat Identities linked authority file (LAF) . Retrieved on 2008-07-24.
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- ↑ It's an Honour – Officer in the Order of Australia
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
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- Australian historians
- Academics from Melbourne
- Officers of the Order of Australia
- Australian women writers
- Australian memoirists
- Australian Mesoamericanists
- Living people
- Historians of Mesoamerica
- Aztec scholars
- Mayanists
- 20th-century Mesoamericanists
- Australian academics
- University of Melbourne alumni
- 1934 births
- American women historians
- Women memoirists
- 20th-century women writers
- Fellows of the Australian Academy of the Humanities