British Academy recognises Manchester academics for their expertise
22 Jul 2022
Find out more about our new Fellows of the British Academy
A number of our academics have been recognised for their knowledge and expertise by being elected as Fellows of the British Academy.
Dr Melanie Giles, Professor Penny Harvey and Professor Hilary Owen are among 85 scholars to be elected to the prestigious fellowship this year. David Olusoga, Professor of Public History, has also been awarded with an Honorary Fellowship in recognition of his broadcasting and public engagement work.
Founded in 1902, the British Academy is the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences. It is a Fellowship of over 1600 of the leading minds in these subjects from the UK and overseas.
Current Fellows include the classicist Professor Dame Mary Beard, the historian Professor Sir Simon Schama and philosopher Professor Baroness Onora O’Neill, while previous Fellows include Dame Frances Yates, Sir Winston Churchill, Seamus Heaney and Beatrice Webb. The Academy is also a funding body for research, nationally and internationally, and a forum for debate and engagement.
David Olusoga’s broadcasting work includes the popular series A House Through Time, and the series Black and British: A Forgotten History which accompanied his book of the same name. On receiving his Honouary Fellowship, he said: “It's a wonderful and unexpected honour to have been elected an Honorary Fellow of the British Academy - I'm thrilled that my work exploring marginalised histories has been recognised in this way.”
Melanie Giles is a Senior Lecturer in Archaeology. Her book Bog Bodies: Face to Face with the Past won 2022’s Book of the Year in the prestigious Current Archaeology Awards. Dr Giles said: “I am both honoured and humbled by this Fellowship, which would not have been possible without the wonderful support of my department of Classics, Ancient History, Archaeology, and Egyptology; the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures; and colleagues in the Manchester Museum. I hope to follow in the footsteps of other female archaeologists and ancient historians to champion the future of our subjects and fulfil the ambitious vision of the British Academy.”
Penny Harvey, Professor of Social Anthropology, joined our University in 1991. Her research spans the globe, and includes work with Dalton Nuclear Institute.
Hilary Owen is a Professor Emerita in Portuguese and Luso-African Studies at our University, as well as being.a Senior Research Fellow in the Sub-Faculty of Portuguese at the University of Oxford. Professor Owen said: “I am honoured and delighted at receiving this recognition from the British Academy. I am very much looking forward to contributing to the vital work the Academy does, and to bringing my perspectives from Portuguese Studies.”
Welcoming the Fellows, the new President of the British Academy, Professor Julia Black, said: "I am delighted to welcome these distinguished and pioneering scholars to our Fellowship. I am equally delighted that we have so many new female Fellows. While I hope this means that the tide is finally turning for women in academia, there is still much to do to make the research world diverse and open to all.
“With our new Fellows’ expertise and insights, the Academy is better placed than ever to open new seams of knowledge and understanding and to enhance the wellbeing and prosperity of societies around the world. I congratulate each of our new Fellows on their achievement and look forward to working with them.”