Vice-Chancellor and President Mark Scott with Associate Professor Sophie Gee in the Chau Chak Wing Museum at the University of Sydney. Photo: Michael Amendolia
Associate Professor Sophie Gee has been appointed inaugural Vice-Chancellor Fellow at the University of Sydney. Her role will be to advise Vice-Chancellor and President Mark Scott on how to broaden and deepen public conversations around the value, identity, and future of universities in a contemporary world and the value of the humanities in universities and in public life.聽
Associate Professor Gee is an expert on how the skills and values of the humanities can transform the ways we work and think across many industries and fields and believes multidisciplinary collaboration is vital to address complex problems such as climate change, AI, food poverty, global conflict, and widespread equity issues.
鈥淎ssociate Professor Gee is a senior scholar of high standing, with international experience, and we welcome her to the university,鈥 said Professor Scott. 鈥淗er insights, knowledge and expertise will be enormously valuable to our community as we continue to test robust ideas and seed creativity to ensure our universities are central to the wider community鈥檚 security, prosperity and well-being.
鈥淯niversities are vital social institutions 鈥 where education and innovation will drive Australia鈥檚 future success. This is where we need to think creatively and work together across disciplines,鈥 Professor Scott said.
鈥淲e are very fortunate to have here at the University world-leading experts to help guide us and prompt discussion and innovation, and we are very happy to be welcoming Associate Professor Gee into our community.鈥
Associate is a writer, researcher and educator with 25 years鈥 experience at Harvard University and Princeton University, where she is a senior academic in the Department of English. Her identity as a scholar is based on merging creative and scholarly work, and on writing and teaching so that complex academic ideas become accessible and appealing to a broad audience within the university, between disciplines, and also between the University and the wider world.
She will explore three key questions while at the University of Sydney this year:
Associate Professor Sophie Gee, VC Fellow 2024
鈥淎s a Vice-Chancellor鈥檚 Fellow in 2024, my goal is to collaborate, and dream big, about creative, unexpected ways to integrate the humanities with STEM, business and social sciences, and to share these dreams with the public,鈥 Associate Professor Gee said.
鈥淚 will work with other scholars and leaders to collaborate at a high level of mutual understanding and intellectual engagement,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檒l start by holding peer-to-peer conversations and workshops with faculty, including through the Sydney Policy Lab, and leaders both on campus and from potential partner organisations across Sydney.
鈥淲e are living in a world defined by crisis and uncertainty,鈥 she said. 鈥淯niversities are crucial for rigorous thinking and public engagement but it鈥檚 hard to do both of those well. People tend to avoid intellectual discomfort but only by leaning into the value of what we don鈥檛 know can we find solutions to our current problems.
鈥淲e need to communicate what a given problem reveals about human emotion, motivation, perception and understanding, and humans are good at hiding and masking these things. That鈥檚 where humanities can really collaborate with other disciplines. I am excited about working with the Sydney Policy Lab on how we best model a culture of thoughtful engagement, considered debate and disagreeing well.鈥
Associate Professor Gee will provide advice to the Vice-Chancellor over a period of six months on how to further amplify the University of Sydney鈥檚 role in creating public knowledge, especially using our strength in arts and humanities. She will also be collaborating with the Sydney Policy Lab on efforts to invigorate the civic life of the University as well as working toward partnerships and philanthropic opportunities that grow public intellectual culture, positioning the University as a centre for rigorous debate, productive disagreement, and fearless curiosity that can give more people an active stake in Sydney鈥檚 civic life.
Associate Professor Sophie Gee speaks with Mark Scott, President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sydney in a recent episode of The Solutionists, a university podcast. Listen here. She is also appearing at .
The Vice-Chancellor's Fellowships have been established at the University of Sydney to provide in-residence status for distinguished figures, giving them access to a scholarly environment and inviting them to work on projects of value to the University, the Vice-Chancellor and communities we serve.聽The initiative is modelled on Fellowships at other institutions in Australia and overseas.
The 2024 VC Fellows are the first of a series of initiatives to be supported by a generous bequest of $8.4M from Sydney alumna Kathleen Joan Laurence (BA, 鈥35, DipEd, 鈥36, MA, 鈥38).
Fellows are from a broad range of backgrounds, including government, industry, business and academia. They bring unique insights to a thought leadership role in an area of strategic importance for the University. They play a key role in the University鈥檚 outreach and engagement with the broader community both in Australia and abroad.
During their appointment, Vice-Chancellor's Fellows will make distinctive and valued contributions to the scholarly and public life of the university.聽They are integral to our role in encouraging public intellectual discourse and debate, leadership development, collaboration and fostering a deeper understanding of what it means to be a uniquely Australian university in a contemporary world.