Lesley Johnson | |
---|---|
Born | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia | 12 April 1949
Academic background | |
Education | University of Sydney University of Queensland |
Alma mater | Monash University |
Thesis | The concept of culture and the English intellectual, 1850–1975 (1976) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Technology Sydney Griffith University |
Lesley Ruth Johnson AM FAHA (born 1949) is an Australian cultural historian,whose research has focused on gender studies and the sociology of education. She is professor emeritus at Griffith University.
Johnson was born in Sydney,New South Wales on 12 April 1949. [1] She was educated in the public school system at Denistone East Public School and then Ryde High School. She won a Commonwealth Scholarship to study at the University of Sydney and graduated with a BA in 1968. [2] She moved to Brisbane where she undertook a Master of Education at the University of Queensland (1972). [3] Johnson won a Commonwealth Postgraduate Award that allowed her to complete a PhD (1976) at Monash University with her thesis,The concept of culture and the English intellectual,1850–1975. [4]
Johnson's career as an academic began with a tutoring position at the University of Queensland in 1972 to 1973. She was appointed lecturer at the University of Melbourne in 1976,progressing to reader in 1990. [2]
Back in Sydney,in 1992 Johnson was professor of communication at Western Sydney University. She then jointly filled the positions of professor of cultural studies and pro vice chancellor for research at the University of Technology,Sydney from 1995 to 2004. [5] She published "Sentenced to Everyday Life:Feminism and the Housewife" [6] [7] and moved to Queensland in 2004 as deputy vice chancellor (research) at Griffith University,remaining there until she retired in 2009. [5]
In "retirement" she was president of the Australian Academy of the Humanities from 2011 to 2014 [5] and served as president of the Australian Council of Learned Academies in 2013. [8]
Johnson was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 1999. [5]
She was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001. [9] She was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2010 Queen's Birthday Honours for "service to education as a leading academic,administrator and author,particularly in the fields of cultural history and feminist studies,and through the establishment of research centres for a range of disciplines". [10]
Johnson was named professor emeritus at the University of Technology Sydney in 2004 and of Griffith University in 2011. [5]
Griffith University is a public research university in South East Queensland on the east coast of Australia. The University was founded in 1971, but was not officially opened until 1975. Griffith University is credited with introducing Australia's first degrees in environmental science and Asian Studies. The university has five campuses, in Gold Coast, Nathan, Logan, South Bank, and Mount Gravatt. The university was named after Sir Samuel Walker Griffith, who was twice Premier of Queensland and the first Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia. Sir Samuel Griffith played a major role in the Federation of Australia and was the principal author of the Australian constitution.
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