Ivor Indyk | |
---|---|
Born | 1949 |
Alma mater | University of Sydney (B.A.) University College London (Ph.D.) |
Occupation(s) | literary academic, editor, publisher, professor |
Relatives | Martin Indyk (brother) Evelyn Juers (wife) |
External image | |
---|---|
Ivor Indyk, by Virginia Wallace-Crabbe (National Library of Australia |
Ivor Indyk (born 1949) is an Australian literary academic, editor and publisher. He is a professor at the University of Western Sydney, and the founding editor and publisher of award-winning literary imprint Giramondo Publishing and HEAT magazine.
Indyk grew up in Sydney, the elder son of Polish Jewish parents who had emigrated from Poland to the United Kingdom.[1] He undertook his Bachelor of Arts at the University of Sydney, and received a PhD from University College London. He has previously taught at the University of Sydney and University of Newcastle; in the late 1970s, he lectured for four years at the University of Geneva.[2] He was named the Whitlam Chair in Writing and Society at the University of Western Sydney in 2005.[3]
Indyk was co-editor of the literary periodical Southerly between 1989 and 1993, before founding the literary magazine HEAT in 1996. In 2001, he took a part-time appointment at the University of Newcastle to launch a new series of HEAT. In 1995, he founded Giramondo Publishing.[2]
Alongside many academic articles and newspaper reviews, Indyk was the author of a 1993 monograph on Australian writer David Malouf. The academic and diplomat Martin Indyk is his brother. He has been married to the writer and critic Evelyn Juers since 1978.[1]