Sue Innes
Susan Innes (4 May 1948 – 24 February 2005)[1][2] was a British journalist, writer, historian, researcher, teacher, artist and feminist campaigner.[1][2][3] Early life and educationSusan (Sue) Innes was born 4 May 1948 in Weymouth, Dorset, the daughter of Jean Corbin, housewife, and Alec Innes, a professional gardener.[1] She was raised in North Wales and in Peterhead, the hometown of her father.[1] She went to Peterhead Academy and to Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen,[2] which she gave up in the late 1960s, travelling to San Francisco to join the hippy movement.[1] She became an activist in the second-wave feminist movement as she started studying English and philosophy[2] at the University of St. Andrews in 1970.[1] She was editor of the university newspaper, Aien.[1][3] CareerAfter her graduation, Sue Innes worked as a journalist for BBC Radio, The Scotsman and Scotland on Sunday.[1] She returned to academia in 1993 and graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1998 with a PhD in the areas of politics, history and sociology.[1] She published a book, Making It Work: women, change and challenge in the 1990s, in 1995.[1][2] Personal life and deathAt St. Andrews, Innes met Jo Clifford, a Scottish playwright and her lifelong partner.[1][3] Innes and Clifford had two daughters[1] in 1980 and 1985.[3] She died on 24 February 2005,[1] aged 56, as a result of a brain tumour.[2] References
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