Education
Ackroyd was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy in Japanese and Japanese Studies at Cambridge University in 1951.
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Ackroyd was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy in Japanese and Japanese Studies at Cambridge University in 1951.
She was a scholar of Japanese language and literature. Her doctoral thesis investigated the political career and writings of the Edo period Confucianist Arai Hakuseki. Ackroyd moved to Brisbane where she helped to develop the University of Queensland"s School of Japanese during the 1970s and 1980s.
She was influential in building the program into one of Australia"s main centres for Japanese studies.
In 1969, she showed prescience when she introduced a course in standard Chinese, which was not then considered to be a priority language at Australian universities. Ackroyd"s studies of Hakuseki culminated in her translations of Oritaku Shiba no Ki, published in 1980 as Told Round a Brushwood Fire: The Autobiography of Arai Hakuseki, and the Tokushi Yoron, published as Lessons from history: the Tokushi yoron in 1982.
Joyce Ackroyd was awarded the Order of the British Empire - Officer (Civil) in 1982. The following year she was awarded the Yamagata Bantō prize by the prefectural government of Osaka for her outstanding contributions to introducing Japanese culture abroad.
Joyce Ackroyd died on 30 August 1991.
Ackroyd served was a member of the faculty of the Australian National University in Canberra until the mid-1960s.