Susan Foley Explained

Susan Foley
Pseudonym:Susan K. Grogan
Birth Name:Susan Kathleen Foley
Birth Date:1949 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Sydney, Australia
Occupation:Historian
Language:English
Nationality:Australian
Alma Mater:Murdoch University
Spouse:

Susan Kathleen Foley (born 3 March 1949) is an Australian historian who specialises in French history, particularly in relation to French gender history, feminism and socialism. From 1992 to 2000, she published under her married name of Susan K. Grogan.[1]

Early life and education

Foley was born in Sydney in 1949 to Lawrence Foley, a railway worker, and Josephine Gooley, a hospital bookkeeper.[2] She was educated at St Mary's Dominican Convent in Maitland, and then studied teaching at Catholic Teachers' College in North Sydney and worked as a secondary school teacher.

In 1971, Foley moved to Karratha, Western Australia where she began studying for a Bachelor of Arts by correspondence at the University of Western Australia. She completed the degree with first class honours at Murdoch University, where she also completed a PhD in 1986.[3]

Academic career

Foley lectured for a year at Murdoch, then moved to New Zealand to take a role lecturing in history at the Victoria University of Wellington in 1987. She was promoted to senior lecturer in 1993, and was head of the university's history department twice. In 2002, she became an associate professor in history. In 2006, she returned to Australia where she joined the University of Melbourne as Principal Fellow in History. She was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2007.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Grimshaw . Patricia . Foley, Susan Kathleen . The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia . Australian Women's Archives Project . 23 September 2019 . en-gb.
  2. Book: Who's Who of Australian Women . 2017 . ConnectWeb.
  3. Charles Fourier, the Saint-Simonians and Flora Tristan on the nature and roles of women. 1986. Thesis. English. Susan K. Grogan.
  4. Web site: Fellow Profile: Susan Foley . 2024-06-17 . Australian Academy of the Humanities . en-AU.