Barbara Lesley BrookesMNZMFRSNZ (born 1955) is a New Zealand historian and academic.[1][2] She specialises in women's history and medical history. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi in 2022.
Biography
Brookes completed a bachelor's degree at the University of Otago in 1976, then won scholarships to Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, where she completed a master's degree (1978) and a PhD (1982).[1][3] Her PhD thesis topic was abortion in England during the inter-war period.[3] Brookes was offered a post-doctoral scholarship at Otago and a permanent position in the university's Department of History in 1983.
In 1986, Brookes and her colleague Dorothy Page introduced the first university-level women's history paper in New Zealand.[3] In 2004, Brookes became head of the Department of History and guided the amalgamation of the department with the art history department to form the Department of History and Art History. She held the position until 2012.[3]
In 2022 Brookes was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi. The society said that Brookes' research "has contributed to a vast international expansion of the historical canon from the 1970s, particularly in relation to the history of gender. It continues to be innovative and widely published".[4]
Marion Castree describes A History of New Zealand Women as "a superb New Zealand history through the perspective of women's lives and all they contributed to our comparatively short but intense experience in Aotearoa. . . . Beautifully illustrated and designed, this book will never date."[6] Susanna Andrew, writing for noted.co.nz, says the book is "a brilliant examination of how we got to where we are now. […] Brookes has marked every change and shift with clarity and scholarly precision." Charlotte Paul, writing for the New Zealand Medical Journal, says that Brookes "weaves different perspectives of Māori and Pakeha lives into a tapestry that enriches our sense of what it is to be a New Zealander."[7]