Cassandra Pybus
Cassandra Jean Pybus is an Australian historian and writer. She is a professor of history at the University of Sydney, and has published extensively on Australian and American history.
Pybus was born in Hobart, Tasmania and educated at North Sydney Girls High School and the University of Sydney. Her mother, Betty Pybus, was a pioneer of women's health in Sydney and Tasmania.
From 1989 to 1994, Pybus was editor of the literary magazine Island. She won the Colin Roderick Award in 1993 for Gross Moral Turpitude, a re-examination of the case of Sydney Sparkes Orr, a Northern Irish academic who became embroiled in a scandal involving a relationship with a student whilst working at the University of Tasmania. In 2000, she won an Adelaide Festival Award for Literature for The Devil and James McAuley, a biography of the poet James McAuley.
Pybus was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001 for outstanding contribution to Tasmanian and Australian literature and education.Books
- Truganini: Journey Through the Apocalypse
- Enterprising Women: Gender Race and Power in the Revolutionary Atlantic
- Other Middle Passages
- Epic Journeys of Freedom: Runaway slaves of the American Revolution and their global quest for liberty
- Black Founders: The unknown story of Australia's first black settlers
- The Woman who Walked to Russia: A writer's search for a lost legend
- American Citizens, British Slaves: Yankee political prisoners in an Australian penal colony, 1839–1850
- Raven Road
- The Devil and James McAuley
- Till Apples Grow on an Orange Tree
- White Rajah: A Dynastic Intrigue
- Gross Moral Turpitude: The Orr Case Reconsidered
- Community of Thieves