Jump to content

Tạ Chí Đại Trường

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tạ Chí Đại Trường
Native name
Tạ Chí Đại Trường
BornTạ Chí Đại Trường
June 21, 1938
Nha Trang, Empire of Annam,  French Indochina
DiedMarch 24, 2016
Saigon, Southeast,  Vietnam
Alma materUniversity of Saigon
GenreArcheology
Customs
Literature
SubjectEducation
Literary movement
Years active1970–2015

Tạ Chí Đại Trường, also pen name Trần Trường Thanh or Dai-truong Ta-chi (21 June 1938 – 24 March 2016), was a Vietnamese writer and historian.[1][2]

Biography

[edit]

Tạ Chí Đại Trường was born on June 31, 1938, in Nha Trang city, but his hometown in Bình Định province. His father was a bachelor of Annamese imperial exams, Mr Tạ Chương Phùng, who participated in the independent movement in the 1940s and 1950s, then joined in the Caravelle club.

Tạ Chí Đại Trường had a cousin named Tạ Chí Diệp (1936 - 1963, a senator from the Đại Việt Nationalist Party), who was eliminated through the form of tying by President Ngô Đình Diệm's secret command at Chí Hòa Prison in summer of 1963. Mr Tạ Chí Diệp was scholar Tạ Chương Phùng's nephew, a very close comrade of President Ngô when they joined the moverment of national revolution about 1940s.[3] It is known that Tạ Chí Diệp and Trương Tử An (Trương Tử Anh's younger brother) were found dead almost at the same time in two different locations (Nhà-Bè River and Chợ-Quán Hospital), even though they were close comrades. This death is considered by Tạ Chí Đại Trường as the collapsed signal of the Ngô Family regime[4].

He graduated from the University of Saigon (Viện Đại-học Sàigòn) with an MA in history in 1964 then taught history in Vietnam and published Lịch Sử Nội Chiến Việt Nam 1771-1802 (Saigon 1973), before being enrolled in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. Its manuscript was awarded the 1970 National Awards for Scholastic Art and Writing, at the subject of History (Giải Văn-học Nghệ-thuật Toàn-quốc, bộ môn Lịch-sử) by President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu.

Tạ Chí Đại Trường was demobilized in 1974 with the rank of captain. He remained in Vietnam after the collapse of the Republic of Vietnam in 1975, and was sent to a re-education camp from 1976 to 1981 by new government. He emigrated to the United States in 1994 as a H.O. person.[5][6]

However, since the early 2000s, Tạ Chí Đại Trường returned to Saigon to live with relatives because he did not feel comfortable settling abroad. He has shifted to researching traditional culture in the Northern Vietnam and has many long visits here. Hanoi National University even invited him to speak and welcome him as a head of state.

He was awarded the 2014 Phan Châu Trinh Culture Award, at the subject of research.

Tạ Chí Đại Trường died at his home in Saigon on March 24, 2016.

Works

[edit]

Poetics

[edit]

Together with Liam C. Kelley he criticised the authenticity of the Hùng kings claiming that they were later invented and that their supposed historicity had no basis in reality.[7][8] Tạ Chí Đại Trường claimed that the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam was unwilling to challenge the current narrative of the Hùng kings because of the adulation that the country had received in light of the Vietnam War by foreigners that admired the communists' struggle that caused it to promote the previously vague myth of the Hùng kings to become a national legend taught unquestionably to the Vietnamese people as it's a powerful origin myth, making any critical discussion about the Hồng Bàng Clan tense.[7]

Books

[edit]
Vietnamese
  • Lịch sử nội chiến Việt Nam từ 1771 đến 1802 (1973)
  • Thần, người và đất Việt (1989)
  • Một khoảng Việt Nam Cộng Hòa nối dài (1993)
  • Việt Nam nhìn từ bên trong (with author Nguyễn Xuân Nghĩa, 1994)
  • Những bài dã sử Việt (1996)
  • Những bài văn sử (1999)
  • Bài sử khác cho Việt Nam : Sơ thảo (2009)
  • Người lính thuộc địa Nam Kỳ (1861–1945) (2014)
  • Chuyện phiếm sử học (2016)
English
  • Human Gods in the Land of Vietnam, Culture and Information (2006)
  • God of Man & Land of Vietnam (2022)
  • Vietnam Tay Son Dynasty, History of Civil War 1771–1802 (2022)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Keith Weller Taylor, John K. Whitmore Essays Into Vietnamese Pasts1995 p27 "Tạ Chí Đại Trường (another name for Trần Trường Thanh), in one of his publications, discusses in detail the influences of Cham culture on Dai Viet, ..." "
  2. ^ Tạ Chí Đại Trường: Người viết sử Việt từ đất Mỹ
  3. ^ The fate of historian Tạ Chí Đại Trường's family and President Ngô Đình Diệm 1 2
  4. ^ The case of Tạ Chí Diệp and Trương Tử An
  5. ^ John C. Schafer Võ Phiến and the sadness of exile Southeast Asia Publications, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Northern Illinois University, 2006 - 367 pages2006 - Page 350 "Tạ Chí Đại Trường earned an MA in history from the University of Saigon in 1964 and taught history in Vietnam before joining the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. After spending some time in a reeducation camp following the fall of the Saigon regime in 1975, he came to the United States in 1994 and lived in California with his relatives."
  6. ^ "Nhà sử học Tạ Chí Đại Trường qua đời". 24 March 2016.
  7. ^ a b Tạ Chí Đại Trường and Trần Hạnh (1 July 2012). "Comments on Liam Kelley's "The Biography of the Hồng Bàng Clan as a Medieval Invented Tradition"". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 7 (2). University of California Press: 139–162. doi:10.1525/vs.2012.7.2.139. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  8. ^ Đinh Từ Bích Thúy (January 2021). "Good Scholarship, Bold Scholarship and Bad Scholarship: A Conversation with Professor Liam Kelley". Da Mau Magazine (Tạp chí Da Màu). Retrieved 13 September 2021.
[edit]