Rhoda Sutherland

British academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rhoda Sutherland (1907 – 6 January 1989) was an academic who studied the French language and specialised in Old French and Old Provencal.[1]

Born
Rhoda Clarke

1907 (1907)
Died6 January 1989(1989-01-06) (aged 81–82)
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Rhoda Sutherland
Born
Rhoda Clarke

1907 (1907)
Died6 January 1989(1989-01-06) (aged 81–82)
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Life

Rhoda Clarke was born in Atherstone in 1907 and attended Nuneaton School for Girls. In 1929 she was Lecturer and in 1935 Fellow of Lady Margaret Hall in Oxford University.[1] She studied the French language and was quoted for her views on the history of the language.[2] Sutherland lectured on Philology which was a subject she defended against those who would like to have seen its scope subsumed into Literary Studies. The American Chinese studies academic Richard Baum credited Sutherland with inspiring him to specialise in linguistics.[1]

In 1938 she married the Oxford librarian Donald Sutherland. She retired in 1971 and died in 1989.

Work

  • (with Will Moore and Enid Starkie) The French Mind. Studies in honour of Gustave Rudler, Oxford 1952[3]
  • The language of the troubadours, in: French Studies 10, 1956, S. 199-215
  • The love meditation in courtly literature, in: Studies in medieval French. Presented to Alfred Ewert in honour of his seventieth birthday, Oxford 1961, S. 165-193

References

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