Anna Rutherford
Anna Rutherford was an Australian-born academic and publisher, who helped to establish the field of post-colonial literature in Europe.
Biography
Rutherford was born in Australia in Mayfield, Newcastle, New South Wales, the daughter of a steelworker. She studied at Newcastle University College, graduating with a first-class degree, after which she went to England and worked as a teacher. In 1966, she was employed as a lecturer in Commonwealth literature at the University of Aarhus, in Denmark.From 1968 to 1996, she was Director of the Commonwealth Literature Centre at the University of Aarhus, Denmark, where she introduced African and West Indian courses, organising in 1971 the first European conference on the British Commonwealth novel. She was considered the key figure in the Association for Commonwealth Language and Literature Study.
In 1979, Rutherford founded Kunapipi: Journal of Postcolonial Writing & Culture, which developed from the Commonwealth Newsletter she had established in 1971 for members of ACLALS. She was editor of Kunapipi until her death. The name derives from Kunapipi, a mother goddess in Aboriginal Australian mythology.
Rutherford also founded and was director of the small publishing company Dangaroo Press.
In 1996, Rutherford returned to Australia, taking Kunapipi and Dangaroo Press with her. That year, an edited collection, A Talent Digger, was published in Rutherford's honour. She was a visiting fellow at Warwick University in 1998.
Rutherford, who had been living in a flat overlooking Nobby's Beach, died in her sleep at a friend's house in Sydney on 21 February 2001, aged 68.