Philip James Ayres
Philip James Ayres (born 28 July 1944 at Lobethal, South Australia) is an Australian biographer and literary historian, a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (London), a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, and a recipient of the Centenary Medal for contributions to literature in 2001.[1]
Biography
He attended Adelaide Boys High School and the University of Adelaide (PhD 1971). He has taught at the University of Adelaide, Monash University, Vassar College and Boston University.[2]
Academic work
His biography subjects include Malcolm Fraser,[3] Douglas Mawson,[4] former Australian Chief Justice Sir Owen Dixon,[5] Sydney's late-19th-century, early-20th-century Catholic Archbishop Patrick Francis Moran[6] and Sir Ninian Stephen[7] (who had been Australia's Governor-General for most of the 1980s).
His literary-historical books include Classical Culture and the Idea of Rome in Eighteenth-Century England,[8] According to WorldCat, the book is held in 398 libraries [9] He is the editor of the two-volume Clarendon Press edition of Shaftesbury’s Characteristicks.[10]
The British Law Quarterly Review described his Owen Dixon as a “conspicuous success” in marrying “distinguished scholarship and narrative skills”,[11] while the Australian Law Journal devoted a 14-page section to complimentary analyses of the same book.[12] Fortunate Voyager, the account of Sir Ninian Stephen's life, displays similar research and narrative methodologies. The other biographies have also received generally excellent reviews in the relevant professional journals,[13] although the author has been criticised for declining to moralise his objectivist presentation of character[14]
He has also written first-hand accounts of several conflict zones, having travelled with Malcolm Fraser in South Africa (1986)[15] and Somalia (1992),[16] and with the Hezb-i-Islami jihadists in Afghanistan in 1987.[17]
He has been twice married (1965 to Maruta Sudrabs; 1981 to Patricia Monypenny née San Martin). He lives in Melbourne and Camperdown (Western Victoria).
References
- ↑ http://www.itsanhonour.gov.au/honours/awards/medals/centenary_medal.cfm (accessed 21 July 2013)
- ↑ University of Adelaide (1969-1971: Tutor); Monash University (1972-2006: Senior Lecturer, Associate Professor, Head of Department); Vassar College (1993: Visiting Professor); Boston University (2001: Professorial Fellow and Visiting Professor).
- ↑ Malcolm Fraser: A Biography (Heinemann, Melbourne, 1987).
- ↑ Mawson: A Life (Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 1999).
- ↑ Owen Dixon (Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 2003; 2004; rev. edn 2007).
- ↑ Prince of the Church: Patrick Francis Moran 1830-1911 (Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 2007).
- ↑ Fortunate Voyager: The Worlds of Ninian Stephen (Miegunyah/Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 2013).
- ↑ Classical Culture and the Idea of Rome in Eighteenth-Century England (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997).
- ↑ WorldCat author record
- ↑ Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury, Characteristics of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times (2 vols, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1999).
- ↑ Tom Bingham, review of Owen Dixon, (2005) 121 Law Quarterly Review, 154-158 at 154.
- ↑ (2003) 77 Australian Law Journal, 682-696 (High Court Centenary number).
- ↑ Mawson: its “high level of research and carefully crafted writing make it a worthy addition to Australian scientific biography”—Brigid Hains, Historical Records of Australian Science, 13, ii (2000), 226-228; see also Rod Beecham in Australian Book Review, June/July 2004, p. 35: “Ayres’s great virtue as a biographer is his scrupulous reliance on primary sources, which he has researched meticulously. He can also be funny.”
- ↑ Frank Brennan, “Tales from the Bench”, Eureka Street, July/August 2003, 37-39.
- ↑ “South African Diary”, final chapter of Ayres, Malcolm Fraser.
- ↑ Quadrant, vol. 36, no. 12, December 1992, pp. 9-14.
- ↑ “Khost: The Crucial Siege”, The Age, Saturday Extra, 28 November 1987, pp. 1-6.