Tran Duc Thao
Trần Đức Thảo (26 September 1917—24 April 1993) was a Vietnamese philosopher. His work (written primarily in French) attempted to unite phenomenology with Marxist philosophy. His work had some currency in France in the 1950s and 1960s, and was cited favorably by Jacques Derrida and Jean-François Lyotard and Louis Althusser.
Born in Hanoi, Vietnam, he was educated there, completing his baccalaureate at 17. In 1936, he continued his studies in France, becoming a student of Maurice Merleau-Ponty at the École Normale Supérieure where he wrote a dissertation for a diplôme d’études supérieures on Hegel. In 1943, he completed his agrégation with a thesis on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, being received premier ex aequo alongside Jules Vuillemin. Through the 1940s, he worked on his first book, Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism. The book argued that the defects of the phenomenological account of consciousness could only be remedied by the Marxist account of labor and society. In the 1940s and 50s, Trần Đức Thảo’s ideas achieved some currency among the elite philosophical circles of France. At the same time, he became an active anti-colonialist, publishing articles in Jean-Paul Sartre and Merleau-Ponty’s journal Les Temps modernes about colonialism in Indochina; these articles were read by Frantz Fanon and other anticolonialists. From October to December 1945, Trần Đức Thảo was jailed by the French government as a threat to its security. Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism was published in 1951, and in the same year he returned to Vietnam, working in support of the Communist Party. In 1956, he was named the Dean of History in the country’s first national university.
But he became critical of the Party over land reforms which had led to many deaths in 1956, and Trần Đức Thảo was caught up in the Nhan Van-Giai Pham affair in which the dissident intellectuals of the late 1950s were publicly criticized or punished. Though Tran Duc Thao was never jailed, he fell out of favor with the ruling Party, publishing two self-criticisms in Nhân Dân and leaving his position of authority in 1958. None of his work was published in his home country from 1965 until 1987. For the next thirty years, his profile was lower, as he worked in the rural provinces translating philosophy into Vietnamese and preparing his book Investigations into the Origin of Language and Consciousness. This book, published in France in 1973, combined materialist biological and cognitive accounts of subjectivity and consciousness with the Marxist account he had elaborated earlier. In the liberalized political climate of the 1980s, he was able to return to France for medical treatment, and there he met many of his old philosophical colleagues again, although he lived in poverty in an apartment at the Vietnamese embassy. He died in Paris in 1993 and was cremated at the Père Lachaise Cemetery.
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Tran Duc Thao, a Vietnamese philosopher who had ties to Jean-Paul Sartre, the French Existentialist thinker, died on April 24 in a hospital in Paris. He was 76 and had returned in 1991 to France, where he had lived as a young man.
The Associated Press reported that Mr. Thao had been in ill health and had been admitted to the hospital after a fall on April 23.
Mr. Thao worked for a time with a journal that Sartre founded in 1945, Les Temps Modernes, publishing a series of conversations with Sartre on the relationship between Marxism and Existentialism.
The French newspaper Le Figaro reported Friday that Mr. Thao aligned himself with Communism in 1945 and that his book “Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism,” published in French in 1951, brought him particular acclaim.
He was born in Hanoi, went to Paris when he was 20 and went on to study at the Ecole Normale Superieure, earning a degree in philosophy in 1944.
Mr. Thao later returned to Hanoi, joined anti-French insurgents in 1951, and was named Dean of the Faculty of History at the University of Hanoi in 1954. But he fell from favor and was prevented from teaching and from publishing his writings in his homeland for more than two decades, until 1987.
In reporting his death Friday, the French newspaper Liberation said that shortly before his death he had decided to remain permanently in France.
No information about survivors was available.
Source: NY Times

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