Penny Russell
Penelope Ann Russell, is an Australian social historian. She is Bicentennial Professor of Australian History at the University of Sydney.
Early life and education
Penelope Ann Russell was born in 1961 in Maryborough, Queensland, to teacher/librarian Mary Gertrude Russell and dentist Gerald Victor Russell. As a young child, she moved with her family to Ballarat and attended primary school and then Ballarat East High School, where she sat the Higher School Certificate in 1978. She completed a Bachelor of Arts with Honours at Monash University in 1982 with her thesis "'Mothers of the Race': A Study of the First Thirty Women Medical Graduates from the University of Melbourne". She was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy in 1990 by the University of Melbourne and her first book, A Wish of Distinction, published in 1994, was developed from her PhD thesis.Career
Russell spent two years in the Australian Public Service before beginning her PhD. She lectured at the University of Melbourne, RMIT and Victorian College Rusden before moving to the University of Sydney as an Australian history lecturer in 1990. She was appointed senior lecturer in 1995, associate professor in 2006 and full professor in 2013, shortly afterwards becoming Bicentennial Professor of Australian History. With Richard White, Russell was co-editor of the journal History Australia from 2009 to 2012.Awards and recognition
Russell was elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2012. She won the Australian History Prize at the New South Wales Premier's History Awards for Savage or Civilised? in 2011. She was awarded the 2023 Ross Stelle AM Fellowship by the State Library of New South Wales to explore the Sydney streetscapes by John Rae.Selected works
Books
- Worden, Nigel; Russell, Penny : Honourable Intentions?: Violence and Virtue in Australian and Cape Colonies, c. 1750 to 1850.