Heather Ingman
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Heather Elizabeth Ingman (born 26 December 1953) is a British academic, noted for her work on Irish and British women's writing, the Irish short story, gender studies and modernism. Also a novelist and journalist, Ingman has worked in Ireland and the UK, especially at Trinity College Dublin, where she is an Adjunct Professor of English and Research Fellow in Gender Studies.


Early life and education

Ingman was born and brought up in
Stockton-on-Tees Stockton-on-Tees, often simply referred to as Stockton, is a market town in the Borough of Stockton-on-Tees in County Durham, England. It is on the northern banks of the River Tees, part of the Teesside built-up area. The town had an estimated ...
, a market town in County Durham in the north of England, one of two daughters of David and Elizabeth Ingman (née Joan Elizabeth Walker, married 1951). Her father was executive chairman of the
British Waterways Board British Waterways, often shortened to BW, was a statutory corporation wholly owned by the government of the United Kingdom. It served as the navigation authority for the majority of canals and a number of rivers and docks in England, Scotland a ...
from 1987 to 1993;London: A.C. Black, a division of Bloomsbury, "Who's Who"

/ref> he led the drive for new legislation to allow the Board to extend its activities, opened one of the Board's first major commercial developments, at
Limehouse Limehouse is a district in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets in East London. It is east of Charing Cross, on the northern bank of the River Thames. Its proximity to the river has given it a strong maritime character, which it retains throug ...
, and was awarded a CBE in 1993. His father, Charles, was director of one of the main local enterprises, Power Gas Group (now part of
Johnson Matthey Johnson Matthey is a British multinational speciality chemicals and sustainable technologies company headquartered in London, England. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index. History Early years ...
). Ingman attended
Teesside High School Teesside High School is a co-educational independent day-school in Eaglescliffe, Stockton-on-Tees, England. Introduction Teesside High School is a co-educational independent day school in Eaglescliffe, Stockton-on-Tees, in northeast England ...
, completing school in 1972, then studied at Bedford College of the
University of London The University of London (UoL; abbreviated as Lond or more rarely Londin in post-nominals) is a federal public research university located in London, England, United Kingdom. The university was established by royal charter in 1836 as a degree ...
, graduating in 1977 with a BA in French and English from the university. In 1980 she was awarded a PhD in French Renaissance poetry and drama by the same university.


Career


Academic

Ingman first taught in the School of French at
Trinity College Dublin , name_Latin = Collegium Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis Reginae Elizabethae juxta Dublin , motto = ''Perpetuis futuris temporibus duraturam'' (Latin) , motto_lang = la , motto_English = It will last i ...
(TCD) from the early 1980s for ten years. She moved back to the UK for her second PhD, and took up a post at the
University of Hull The University of Hull is a public research university in Kingston upon Hull, a city in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was founded in 1927 as University College Hull. The main university campus is located in Hull and is home to the Hull ...
, as Lecturer in English, specialising in Women's Studies, for eight years. She secured her PhD from Loughborough University, on women's inter-war fiction, in 1996. She returned, after about ten years, to Dublin, to work at the Department of English at Trinity College, in time becoming an Adjunct Professor. She later also took up a post at the Centre for Women's Studies within TCD; she is currently a Visiting Research Fellow at what is now the Centre for Gender and Womens Studies. Ingman also speaks regularly at conferences, has been interviewed on radio, and supervises and has acted as external examiner for PhD candidates in at least five universities in the UK, Ireland and the USA. Ingman is also an Honorary Research Fellow of the Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies at the
University of Aberdeen The University of Aberdeen ( sco, University o' 'Aiberdeen; abbreviated as ''Aberd.'' in List of post-nominal letters (United Kingdom), post-nominals; gd, Oilthigh Obar Dheathain) is a public university, public research university in Aberdeen, Sc ...
. After an early monograph, Ingman published academic papers regularly over more than fifteen years, and wrote, edited or co-edited eight academic texts from 1998 to 2018, several of which are major topic surveys, widely held in academic libraries.


Literary

Ingman published her first novel in 1987, then returned to the form in 1994, publishing six books in under five years. After a gap of nearly 20 years, she published a new novel in 2017.


Publications


Academic works


Books

* 2018: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature (Ingman and Clíona Ó Gallchoir, eds) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ) * 2018: Ageing in Irish Writing: Strangers to Themselves (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, ) * 2013: Irish Women's Fiction: From Edgeworth to Enright (Newbridge: Irish Academic Press, , "first ever single-volume survey of Irish women's fiction, exploring the evolution of themes and styles, as well as the lives of the authors, with all major fiction genres, including children's writing, crime fiction, and chick lit") * 2009 (online edition 2010): A History of the Irish Short Story (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ) * 2007: Twentieth-Century Fiction by Irish Women: Nation and Gender (London: Routledge, ) * 2004: "Women's Spirituality in the Twentieth Century: An Exploration through Fiction" (Bern and Oxford: Peter Lang, ) * 1999: Mothers and Daughters in the Twentieth Century: A Literary Anthology (Ingman as editor) (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, , containing fiction, poetry and prose with multi-cultural perspectives on the mother-daughter relationship, including feminist and psychoanalytical theory) * 1998: Women's Fiction Between the Wars: Mothers, Daughters and Writing (Edinburgh University Press, , with critical analysis of Virginia Woolf, Dorothy Richardson, Ivy Compton-Burnett, Elizabeth Bowen, Rose Macaulay and Jean Rhys) * 1988: Machiavelli in Sixteenth-Century French Fiction (Bern and New York: Peter Lang Publishing, as part of American University Studies – Series 3, Comparative Literature)


Journal articles and chapters

''A sample collection of articles, all from peer-reviewed works.'' * 2018: "'A Living Writer': Elizabeth Bowen and Katherine Mansfield" in The Elizabeth Bowen Review, volume 1, pp. 30–41 * 2018: "'Strangers to Themselves': Ageing, the Individual and the Community in the Fiction of Iris Murdoch, John Banville and John McGahern" in Irish University Review, volume 48 (2), pp. 202–218 * 2017: "Silence, Language and Power in Elizabeth Bowen's Work" in Silence in Modern Irish Literature (M. McAteer, ed.), Brill Rodophi, pp. 49–61 * 2017: "Spirituality in Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse" in Virginia Woolf (J. Acheson, ed.), Palgrave, pp. 32–45 * 2016: "The Short Story in Ireland to 1945: A National Literature" in The English Short Story (D. Head, ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 168–184 * 2016: "The Short Story in Ireland since 1945: A Modernizing Tradition" in The English Short Story (D. Head, ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 185–201 * 2015: "Virginia Woolf and Ageing: The Years and Between the Acts" in the Virginia Woolf Bulletin (49), pp. 17–24 * 2015: "The Irish Short Story" in Oxford Bibliographies in British and Irish Literature (A. Hadfield, ed.), Oxford University Press * 2014: "The Female Writer in Short Stories by Irish Women" in The Irish Short Story: Traditions and Trends (E. D'hoker and S. Eggermont, eds), Bern and Geneva: Peter Lang, pp.259–78 * 2013: Review of "Imperial Refugee: Olivia Manning's Fictions of War" by Eve Patten, in the Irish University Review, vol. 43 (1), pp.252–55 * 2013: "Aliens: London in Irish Women's Writing" in Irish Writing London, vol. 2 (T. Herron, ed.), London and New York: Bloomsbury, pp.47–63 * 2013: "Masculinities in Mary Lavin's short stories" in Mary Lavin (E. D'hoker, ed.), Dublin: Irish Academic Press, pp.30–48 * 2011: Entries for Jennifer Johnston and Anne Enright in the Literary Encyclopedia, ISSN 1747-678X * 2010: "Religion and the occult in women's modernism" in the Cambridge Companion to Modernist Women Writers (M.T. Linett, ed.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 187–202 * 2010: "'Like Shakespeare,' she added ...'or isn't it': Shakespearean Echoes in Elizabeth Bowen's Portrait of Ireland" in Shakespeare and the Irish Writer (J. Clare and S. O'Neill, eds), Dublin: UCD Press, pp. 153–165 * 2009: "Maternal Subjectivity: a Kristevan Reading of Anne Enright's Memoir, Making Babies: Stumbling into Motherhood" in From the Personal to the Political: Toward a New Theory of Maternal Narrative (A. O'Reilly and S.C. Bizzini, eds), Selinsgrove: Susquehanna University Press, pp.225–37 * 2007: "The Evolution of the Mother-Daughter Story in Three Novels by Irish Women: From Abject to Artist" in Women's Writing in Western Europe: Gender and Generation (A. Giorgio and J. Waters, eds), Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp.186–199 * 2006: "The Artist, the Traveller, the Lover: Identity and Irish Nationalism in the Novels of Kate O'Brien (1897–1974)" in Identity and Cultural Translation: Writing across the Borders of Englishness (A.G. Macedo and M.E. Pereira, eds), Bern and Oxford: Peter Lang, pp.201–212 * 2005: "Nature, gender and nation: An ecofeminist reading of two novels by Irish women" in Irish Studies Review (British Association for Irish Studies), 13 (4), pp.517–530 * 2002: "Edna O'Brien: Stretching the Nation's Boundaries" in Irish Studies Review (BAIS), 10 (3), pp.253–266 * 2001: "The Case of Virginia Woolf: Women, Spirituality and Writing in the Inter-War Period in England" in Towards a Different Transcendence (K. Biezeveld, Anne-Claire Mulder, eds), Bern and Oxford: Peter Lang, pp.187–214


Fiction

* 1987: The Dance of the Muses: A Novel on the Life of Pierre Ronsard (London: Peter Owen, ) * 1994: The Quest (the only work published as ''Heather von Prondzynski'') (Dublin: Attic Press, , novel) * 1994: Sara (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, , novel, the title character dealing with infertility and adoption from Ecuador) * 1995: Anna (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, , novel) * 1996: Survival (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, , novel, "a contemporary tale set in England, Germany and Ireland") * 1996: Waiting at the Gate (London: Fourth Estate, , novel, "featuring a group of mothers who meet and bond while waiting at the school gate, the lead a Tory MP's wife, with children of 7 and 3, the eldest autistic") * 1998: Stealing Heaven (London: Fourth Estate, , novel, "about two sisters returning to Yorkshire after their mother's death") * 2017: Lovers and Dancers (London: Endeavour Press, )


Journalism

Ingman wrote a number of "Englishwoman's Diary" columns for the
Irish Times ''The Irish Times'' is an Irish daily broadsheet newspaper and online digital publication. It launched on 29 March 1859. The editor is Ruadhán Mac Cormaic. It is published every day except Sundays. ''The Irish Times'' is considered a newspaper ...
in the early 2000s,Dublin, Ireland: The Irish Times, archive search, showing columns in, e.g., June, August and November 2001, January, March, April, July, October and December 2002, etc., to at least 2005 and then and later wrote literary articles and reviews for the paper.


Personal life

Ingman is married to
Ferdinand von Prondzynski Ferdinand von Prondzynski (born 30 June 1954) is a former university leader in Ireland and Scotland, a lawyer and legal academic, a high-profile public commentator and a candidate Anglican cleric. Formerly the Principal and Vice-Chancellor of ...
, second President of
Dublin City University Dublin City University (abbreviated as DCU) ( ga, Ollscoil Chathair Bhaile Átha Cliath) is a university based on the Northside of Dublin, Ireland. Created as the ''National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin'' in 1975, it enrolled its f ...
and then Principal of
Robert Gordon University Robert Gordon University, commonly called RGU, is a public university in the city of Aberdeen, Scotland. It became a university in 1992, and originated from an educational institution founded in the 18th century by Robert Gordon (philanthropist), ...
. She has lived in the UK, Ireland, France and Ecuador. While working at the Universities of Hull and York, part-time, she lived in Yorkshire, then between Dublin (where a house on the DCU campus was part of von Prondzynski's contract) and Westmeath (the family lived partly at, and later took over,
Knockdrin Castle Knockdrin () is a townland and Electoral division (Ireland), electoral division that is 5.6 kilometers northeast of Mullingar, in County Westmeath, Republic of Ireland, Ireland. It is the home of the Westmeath Hunt, and its most notable buildin ...
outside
Mullingar Mullingar ( ; ) is the county town of County Westmeath in Ireland. It is the third most populous town in the Midland Region, with a population of 20,928 in the 2016 census. The Counties of Meath and Westmeath Act 1543 proclaimed Westmeat ...
, Co. Westmeath, from von Prondzynski's family). Knockdrin Castle and its estate were placed on the market in 2017. As of 2018, Ingman lives and works between Dublin and Aberdeen. Ingman and von Prondzynski have two sons, the elder (born 1989) adopted from Educador, the younger born in 1991 in the United Kingdom, educated at the
University of Buckingham , mottoeng = Flying on Our Own Wings , established = 1973; as university college1983; as university , type = Private , endowment = , administrative_staff = 97 academic, 103 support , chance ...
and now working as a copywriter for the
Conservative Party The Conservative Party is a name used by many political parties around the world. These political parties are generally right-wing though their exact ideologies can range from center-right to far-right. Political parties called The Conservative P ...
.


Notes and references


External sources


Trinity College Dublin – Staff Profile – Heather Ingman
with details of office at TCD, teaching and research interests and PhD supervision work
Trinity College Dublin – Research – Heather Ingman
notes on PhDs and selected publications
ResearchGate – Heather Ingman
with details of 57 research works
The Literary Encyclopedia – Contributors – Heather Ingman
with summary of career and interests
Heather Ingman official site – About Heather Ingman
with career and media data {{DEFAULTSORT:Ingman, Heather 21st-century British people. 20th-century British people British women writers People from Stockton-on-Tees People educated at Teesside High School Alumni of Bedford College, London Alumni of the University of London Academics of Trinity College Dublin Academics of the University of Hull Alumni of Loughborough University 1953 births Living people