Known for her lifelong work in Aboriginal social issues and women’s rights, Professor Marcia Langton AM of the Bidjara Nation has added another honour to her long list of accolades, being installed as an Honorary Fellow of at ҹɫÊÓƵ.
Professor Langton’s Honorary Fellowship, the highest honour the college bestows, was awarded during the College’s Convocation Service, one of the first official events of the new year.
Emmanuel College Principal said Professor Langton personified the heart of university education.
“It is an honour to add Professor Langton to the prestigious list of honorary fellows at our college, which includes former ҹɫÊÓƵ Vice Chancellors Professor John Hay AC and Professor Debbie Terry AO,” he said.
“After the service, Marcia spoke to first year students and guests at Emmanuel’s Convocation dinner about the great privilege of a collegiate education at ҹɫÊÓƵ. She emphasised it came with a responsibility to give back to the wider community,” he said.
Introducing Professor Langton, Professor Gill quoted from her .
“The role of a public intellectual is not to agree with the paradigm but to be sceptical, to ask questions, refute mistaken beliefs, discuss important ideas and literature, provide accurate information and cogent interpretations of matters.”
Professor Langton attended ҹɫÊÓƵ in the late 1960s, and was active in the women’s liberation movement throughout the 1970s, highlighting the oppression of black women.
She continued to work for Aboriginal causes and became a key participant in the during the late 1990s and has appeared in film and on television portraying strong Aboriginal characters.
In 1993 she was made a Member of the Order of Australia for service as an anthropologist and advocate of Aboriginal issues, and she was admitted as a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 2001.
Professor Langton is the in the Centre for Health Equity at the University of Melbourne.
Media: Adjunct Professor Stewart Gill, s.gill@emmanuel.uq.edu.au, +61 7 3871 9100.