Barbara Burford

Barbara Yvonne Veronica Burford (9 December 1944 – 20 February 2010) was a British medical researcher, civil servant and writer. She was born in Jamaica and moved to the United Kingdom at the age of 10. Burford attended Dalston County Grammar School and studied medicine at the University of London.[1]

Barbara Burford
Born(1944-12-09)9 December 1944
Died20 February 2010(2010-02-20) (aged 65)
EducationDalston County Grammar School
Alma mater
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions

Biography

Early years

Burford was born in Jamaica on 9 December 1944 and was raised there by her grandmother until the age of seven. In 1955 Burford moved to London with her family, where she attended Dalston County Grammar School, which later became Kingsland Secondary School. The school is now known as Petchey Academy and specialises in health, care and medical science.[2] Burford described herself as a "descendent of three different diasporas: African, Jewish and Scots", as well as claiming her lesbian identity.[3]

Medical career

Burford joined the National Health Service in 1964 as a specialist in electron microscopy at postgraduate teaching hospitals. She later began working at the Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital in a team with Sheila Haworth.[1] Haworth is a professor of developmental cardiology at the Institute of Child Health and was in 2006 appointed Commander of The Most Excellent Order of the British Emipre for services to the National Health Service.[4]

Writing

Burford was an active writer, having written plays, short stories, poems, and science fiction stories.[5] The 1980 anthology A Dangerous Knowing: Four Black Women Poets, to which Burford was a contributor, was the first anthology to be published in the field of black British women's writing. The anthology was described in the academic journal Hecate as "a gift" and a "testimony to the depth of Black feeling and the complex power inherent in Black love."[6]

Burford's 1984 play Patterns was commissioned by Changing Women's Theatre. The play focused on women's labour and was performed at the Oval Theatre in London.[7]

The Threshing Floor (1986), an eponymous novella and collection of short stories, features in many school and college reading lists across the United Kingdom, and individual works from the collection have been republished in other anthologies.[8] Burford's writing was included in the anthology Daughters of Africa (ed. Margaret Busby, 1992).

Burford's works were selected multiple times by the journal The Women's Review of Books as works that readers of the journal might find interesting.[9]

Equality and diversity

In 1999 Burford was appointed Director of Equality for the Department of Health, a post she held until 2002.[10]

University of Bradford

Burford assisted with the creation of Bradford's healthcare apprenticeship scheme, led by Bradford University, which is credited with helping transform the diversity of the city's healthcare workforce.[1]

Burford was awarded an honorary doctorate in 2001 from the University of Bradford to recognise her contributions to equality and diversity. After her retirement in 2005 Burford became the first deputy director of the university's Centre for Inclusion and Diversity.

Death and legacy

Burford died of respiratory failure on 20 February 2010.[1]

The University of Bradford set up an annual lecture in memory of Burford known as the Barbara Burford Annual Memorial Lecture, given as part of the international annual Making Diversity Interventions Count conference. The lecture is given each year by one of her colleagues from the field of equality and diversity who had direct links to Burford and her work.[10]

The Barbara Burford Honour (Excellence in STEM) was founded in 2017 by British magazine Gay Times as part of the Gay Times Honours, a series of honours to recognise LGBT individuals who have made a difference in their field.[11] The inaugural Barbara Burford Honour was won by Rachel Padman, a transgender astrophysics lecturer from the University of Cambridge.[12]

Publications

Plays
  • Patterns (1984)
Poems
  • A Dangerous Knowing: Four Black Women Poets (1980)
  • Dancing the Tightrope: New Love Poems by Women (1987)
Short stories
  • The Threshing Floor (1986)
gollark: That would somewhat defeat the point of having a decentralized platform thing.
gollark: Well, I might look at joining matrix or whatever then. One of the reasons I don't have any fediverse/whatever stuff set up is that I currently only have access to a free domain which might randomly decide to to unexist, and I don't want that to get stuck in remote config files everywhere.
gollark: I'd imagine it mostly attracts... open-source-stuff people, and also has smallish groups.
gollark: What sort of stuff actually is on there?
gollark: They do, but the question is how much Discord actually *cares*.

References

  1. Worrow, Eileen (26 May 2010). "Barbara Burford obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  2. "WAN: The Petchey Academy by Aedas in London". www.worldarchitecturenews.com. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  3. Donnell, Alison (2002). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. London: Routledge. ISBN 0203194993. OCLC 51601660.
  4. "New Year honours in the voluntary and public sectors". The Guardian. 30 December 2006. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  5. Wisker, Gina (2000). Post-Colonial and African American Women's Writing: A Critical Introduction. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 294. ISBN 978-0-333-72746-1.
  6. Jewell, Terri (30 November 1986). "A Review of a Dangerous Knowing: Four Black Women Poets By Barbara Burford, Jackie Kay, Grace Nichols and Gabriela Pearse (London: Sheba Feminist Publishers)". Hecate. 12 via Questia.
  7. Horton, Emily; Philip Tew; Leigh Wilson (eds.). The 1980s: a decade of contemporary British fiction. London. ISBN 9781441126498. OCLC 869847517.
  8. Burford, Barbara (1989). Salmonson, Jessica Amanda (ed.). What Did Miss Darrington See?: An Anthology of Feminist Supernatural Fiction. New York: Feminist Press at the City University of New York. pp. 90-100. ISBN 1-55861-005-7.
  9. Gardiner, Linda (September 1986). "This Month's Bookshelf". The Women's Review of Books. 3: 20 via JSTOR.
  10. North of England Commissioning Support (June 2014). "Diversity E-Newsletter, No 4". Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  11. "The Barbara Burford Gay Times Honour (Excellence in STEM)". Gay Times. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  12. "Rachael Padman awarded the Gay Times 'Barbara Burford Honour' for STEMM — Department of Physics". www.phy.cam.ac.uk. 22 November 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
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