Patrick Wolfe
Patrick Wolfe (1949 – 18 February 2016)[1] was an Australian historian and scholar. Born into a Irish Catholic and German Jewish family in Yorkshire, England, his works are credited with establishing the field of settler colonial studies.[2] He also made significant contributions to several academic fields, including anthropology, genocide studies, Indigenous studies, and the historiography of race, colonialism, and imperialism.[3] BiographyWolfe was born to an Irish Catholic and German Jewish family in Yorkshire where he received a Jesuit education.[1] In the 1970s he collaborated with Sibnarayan Ray and Greg Dening as an undergraduate.[1] Along with Maurice Bloch, he began his post-graduate studies in social anthropology at the London School of Economics and Political Science.[1] He then went on to pursue his doctorate with Greg Dening under the supervision of Dipesh Chakrabarty.[1] As a doctoral student he taught Aboriginal history at the University of Melbourne.[1] He was associated with a number of universities in Australia as a teacher and researcher, including Victoria University and La Trobe University. Wolfe held fellowships at Harvard and Stanford among other places.[4] He never held an academic tenure or a permanent university position.[5] His research spanned race and colonialism around the world.[6] Wolfe's home was Healesville on Wurundjeri country. At his memorial service, Wurundjeri Elder Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin described Wolfe as a cherished friend of the Wurundjeri.[5] WorksMonographs
Edited collections
Academic articles
References
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