Difference between revisions of "Robert Darby"

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'''Robert J. L. Darby''' BA, B Litt, {{PhD}} ({{LifeData|death=2019-03|deathplace=Canberra, ACT|deathcountry=Australia}}<ref>{{REFweb
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'''Robert J. L. Darby''' {{BA}}, B Litt, {{PhD}} ({{LifeData|death=2019-03|deathplace=Canberra, ACT|deathcountry=Australia}}<ref>{{REFweb
 
  |url=https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/robert-darby-obituary?pid=191916659
 
  |url=https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/robert-darby-obituary?pid=191916659
 
  |title=Robert John Darby
 
  |title=Robert John Darby

Revision as of 16:21, 13 October 2021

Robert Darby

Robert J. L. Darby BA[a 1], B Litt, Ph.D.[a 2] (died March 2019 in Canberra, ACT, Australia[1]) was an independent scholar and freelance writer from Canberra, the capital of Australia. He began his writing and research career as a literary historian, with a Ph.D.[a 2] on Australian literature and politics in the 1960s, but his interests have broadened since then to include many topics in cultural, social and medical history, as well as ethics and current affairs. His major published work so far has been a detailed account of the rise and fall of routine "health" circumcision in Britain (A surgical temptation, 2005), and since then he has written widely on medical, historical and ethical aspects of both male and female circumcision - which he regard as primarily a human rights and social justice issue, not really a medical issue at all. He is also author of "The sorcerer's apprentice: Why can't the United States stop circumcising boys?"

He also prepared a collection of the medical writings of Arthur Conan Doyle, Round the Red Lamp (Valancourt Books, 2007), and an edited edition of Elements of Social Science by the great Victorian iconoclast George Drysdale.

Publications

See also

External links

Abbreviations

  1. REFweb Bachelor of Arts, Wikipedia. Retrieved 13 October 2021. (BA or AB; from the Latin baccalaureus artium or artium baccalaureus.)
  2. a b REFweb Doctor of Philosophy, Wikipedia. Retrieved 16 June 2021. (Also abbreviated as D.Phil.)

References

  1. REFweb (27 March 2019). Robert John Darby, Canberra Times.