User:Lorelei/Desrey Fox
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Dr. Desrey Fox | |
---|---|
Born | Desrey Clementine Caesar January 2, 1955 |
Died | December 11, 2009 | (aged 54)
Nationality | Guyanese |
Occupation(s) | Academic and Minister of Education |
Desrey Fox (née Caesar) (2 January 1955 - 11 December 2009) was an Akawaio-Guyanese academic and politician.[1][2][3]
Life
[edit]Early years
[edit]Desrey Clementine Caesar was born to Gibson and Anita Caesar on 2 January 1955 in Waramadong, on the Karanang River in the Cuyuni-Mazaruni region of what was then British Guiana, now Guyana.[4][5] She was the eldest of seven children. Her father was a Venezuelan migrant who trained to be a teacher at the Adventist College in Trinidad. Her mother came from Kako Village on the Mazaruni River. Both of her parents were among the earliest schoolteachers in Waramadong. She was brought up speaking English, but learnt Akawaio from her grandmother.
Education and academic work
[edit]Fox attended Waramadong Primary School, before moving to Georgetown where she studied first at Campbellville Secondary School and then at the Seventh-Day Adventist Academy. Due to insufficient financial resources she returned to Waramadong to prepare for her GCEs.
In 1973, Fox enrolled on a two year rural midwifery training course at Georgetown School of Nursing. She subsequently worked as a nurse at Georgetown Public Hospital for over three years.
In March 1977, she was recruited by Dr. Walter Edwards at the University of Guyana as a junior researcher on the Amerindian Languages Project. Shortly after taking up the position, she was made the lead research assistant on the project. Fox continued working on the Amerindian Languages Project for many years, and the project eventually became the Amerindian Research Unit (ARU). She was the head of the ARU for a time.
In 1984 she enrolled in the Faculty of Social sciences at the University of Guyana to study for a BSc in Sociology. In 1996, she won a European Union Scholarship to read for an MA in Environmental Anthropology at the University of Kent in Canterbury in 1996. She subsequently returned to her job at the University of Guyana. Later, she won a presidential scholarship to study at Rice University in Texas for a doctorate in Linguistics. Her dissertation was entitled Zauro’nodok Agawayo Yau: Variants of Akawaio Spoken at Waramadong, and she was awarded her PhD in 2003.
Politics
[edit]In 2006, Fox was sworn in as the Minister of the Ministry of Education. She was one of the countries first female indigenous ministers.
Awards
[edit]She was posthumously awarded The Cacique's Crown of Honour in 2011.
Selected Publications
[edit]The Indigenous Condition in Guyana: A Situational Analysis of the Mabura Great Falls Community
Continuity and Change among the Amerindians in Guyana
Five Hundred Years After: Indigenous Women in the Caribbean Revisited
Caught within the Cracks: the Case of the Amerindian Women of Guyana
Zauro’no dok Akawaio Yau: Variants of Akawaio Spoken in the Village of Warmadong
Body Metaphors in Akawaio House Construction
She won numerous prizes for her work, including: the Robert Lowery Pattern Prize from Rice University, the Dennis Irving Prize from the University of Guyana, and the post-doctoral National Science Foundation Grant from Rice University.
References
[edit]- ^ Admin (28 June 2012). "Dr. Desrey Fox hailed as true Guyanese patriot". Guyana Times International. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ GINA (27 June 2012). "Life and work of late Dr. Desrey Fox hailed". Guyana Chronicle. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ Stabroek Staff (26 June 2012). "Desrey Fox hailed for immense contribution to development - at memorial lecture". Stabroek News. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
- ^ Stabroek Staff (20 December 2009). "Desrey Fox, January 2, 1955 - December 11, 2009". Stabroek News. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ Knews (12 December 2009). "Minister Dr. Desrey Fox Succumbs". Kaieteur News. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- Interview
- SN article
- GY chronicle
- Guyana Observer
- GINA press release
- SN remembrance
- Kaieteur News
- Stabroek News - a goodie
- SN again
External links
[edit]