Marie Tulip
Marie Tulip (12 March 1935 – 19 September 2015)[1][2] was an Australian feminist writer, academic and proponent for the ordination of women as priests.[3] Early and family lifeBorn Marie Grant in Mackay, Queensland to parents Robert and Elspeth Grant, Tulip attended a Presbyterian church as a child.[1] Tulip attended boarding school in Brisbane and later, having received a scholarship, attended the University of Queensland where she studied Arts and achieved an Honours degree in French.[1] As an undergraduate, she participated in Australian Student Christian Movement gatherings with, among others, James (Jim) Tulip (who became Associate Professor of English and Lecturer in Divinity at the University of Sydney).[4][5][6] They married in Chicago in 1957.[1] They had four children and, by the time of her death in 2015, five grandchildren.[1] CareerIn Chicago, Tulip undertook a Master's degree at Northwestern University while also teaching at Roosevelt University.[1] Upon her return to Australia, Tulip tutored in the French Department at the University of Sydney and, after a year, transferred to Macquarie University where she produced a series of publications, Outreach Texts, in relation to the University's newly-formed Teaching English as a Second Language course.[1] She went on to teach courses in feminism and religion and published work in these fields. In 1968, Tulip was a founder of Christian Women Concerned, the first explicitly religious feminist organisation to emerge in Australia.[7][8] The group published Magdalene, of which Tulip was the editor.[3] In 1973, Tulip was appointed co-ordinator of the Australian Council of Churches (now the National Council of Churches in Australia) Commission on the Status of Women, an initiative of Jean Skuse. She was also a member of the National Women's Consultative Council, established in 1984. Tulip's book Knowing otherwise: feminism, women & religion, was co-authored with Erin White and published in 1991. One reviewer, Margaret Heagney described the work as “a vital contribution to feminist scholarship in Australia”. [9] Works
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