Patrick Deane (professor)

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Patrick Deane
Deane in 2018
21st Principal of Queen's University
Assumed office
1 July 2019
ChancellorMurray Sinclair
Shelagh Rogers
Preceded byDaniel Woolf
7th President of McMaster University
In office
1 July 2010  30 June 2019
ChancellorSuzanne Labarge
Preceded byPeter George
Succeeded byDavid H. Farrar
President of the University of Winnipeg
Acting
In office
2002  2 May 2004
Preceded byConstance Rooke
Succeeded byLloyd Axworthy
Personal details
Born (1956-12-09) 9 December 1956 (age 69)
EducationUniversity of the Witwatersrand (BA)
University of Western Ontario (MA, PhD)
Academic background
ThesisRaising a Valid Sign: A Defence of the Form of David Jones’s "Anathemata" (1986)
Academic work
DisciplineEnglish literature
Institutions

Patrick Deane (born 9 December 1956) is a Canadian scholar and university administrator, currently serving as the 21st Principal of Queen's University. He was previously the acting president of the University of Winnipeg (2003–2004), the Vice-principal (Academic) at Queen's University (2005–2010) and the 7th President of McMaster University (2010–2019).[1][2][3][4]

Deane was born in 1956[5][6] in South Africa.[7] His father, whose ancestors emigrated from Liverpool to South Africa in the 1820s, joined the British Royal Navy during World War II.[8] After the war, Deane's mother met his father in Canada, when he went there on a business trip; they got married in 1947.[9] When Deane was 15, his elder brother, who was 5 years his senior and was on conscription service, died of testicular cancer, after being misdiagnosed and denied treatment by a civilian doctor.[8]

Deane went to King Edward VII School in Johannesburg,[9] and then studied English and law at the University of the Witwatersrand, where he was a vocal and active opponent of apartheid.[3][1][10] He graduated in 1978 and moved to Canada, to study English literature at the University of Western Ontario, obtaining a Master of Arts in 1980 and a PhD in 1985.[3][11]

Career

Deane's professional career began in 1986, when he was appointed an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, teaching English literature.[2][12] He was invited back to the University of Western Ontario in 1988, when he was awarded the John Charles Polanyi Prize for Literature,[13] becoming an assistant professor in the Department of English and teaching 21-century British literature,[7] and was promoted to associate professor in 1994.;[2] he was also Vice-Chair (1993-1995) and Chair (1997-2001) of the Department.[2]

In 2001, Deane moved to the University of Winnipeg to take up the position of Vice-President (Academic),[7] concurrently serving as a Professor of English.[2] When the university's president, Constance Rooke, resigned in 2002, following a dispute with the board of regents over the university's finance,[14] he became the Acting President and Vice-Chancellor in 2003.[15][16] During this period, Deane oversaw the elimination of the university's accumulated debt, the first surplus budget in a decade, and the creation of the University of Winnipeg Foundation, a new fundraising arm for the university.[15][17] Deane handed over the presidency to Lloyd Axworthy in 2004, returning to the role of Vice-President (Academic) and taking the newly established position of Provost.[2] In 2005, Deane accepted the appointment of Vice-Principal (Academic) at Queen's University and serving as a Professor of English Language and Literature in parallel. He held these positions until 2010, when he assumed the role of President and Vice-Chancellor of McMaster University.[2]

In November 2018, Queen's announced the return of Deane to succeed Daniel Woolf as the 21st Principal and Vice-Chancellor.[18] Deane formally stepped down as McMaster's president on 30 June 2019, having served nearly 2 full terms in that capacity.[19] He assumed the new role as the following day, on 1 July 2019.[1]

Personal life

Honors and awards

References

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