Trần Văn Dĩnh: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|name = Tran Van Dinh |
|name = Tran Van Dinh |
||
|image = Tran Van Dinh.jpg |
|image = Tran Van Dinh.jpg |
||
|image_size = |
|image_size = 150px |
||
|caption = Tran Van Dinh |
|caption = Tran Van Dinh |
||
|birth_name = Tran Van Dinh |
|birth_name = Tran Van Dinh |
Revision as of 15:41, 28 July 2011
![]() | This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (July 2011) |
Tran Van Dinh | |
---|---|
Tran Van Dinh Tran Van Dinh | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Tran Van Dinh |
Origin | Hue City, Vietnam |
Occupation(s) | Diplomat,Professor, Author |
Tran Van Dinh is an American – Vietnamese diplomat, author, professor.
Early life
Dr. Tran Van Dinh, professor emeritus (international politics and communications) at Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was born and raised in Hue, the former imperial capital of Vietnam.
He came from a family of Confucian scholars, Buddhist philosophers and Taoist poets. In his youth, he participated in the anti-colonial struggle against the French. Later, he became a diplomat and has served in Thailand, Burma (Minister plenipotentiary), the United Nations (observer), Argentina, Mexico (nonresident ambassador) and the United States of America (Minister Counselor, Charge d'affaires).
Diplomatic career
After serving for 10 years in the Vietnamese diplomatic service in Southeast Asia, Tran Van Dinh joined the Embassy of Vietnam in Washington DC in 1961. From their post in Washington, the Van Dinhs took in the events of the growing Civil Rights Movement, in particular the 300,000 person March on Washington led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. These events would have a profound impact on their relationship with the United States, and would foreshadow their own immersion into the ongoing struggle for liberation around the globe.
In 1963, Tran was in charge of the Vietnamese Embassy in Washington DC as well as non-resident Ambassador to Argentina.
Academic career
He resigned at the end of 1963 to pursue full time his passion for peace and social justice work. This included teaching courses in Asian Humanism at the State University of New York/Old Westbury and the DagHammarskjold College at Columbia, MD. From 1971 to 1985, he taught International Politics and Communications and chaired the Department of Pan-African Studies at Temple University.
Marriage
His wife is Nuong Van Dinh Tran. While Tran was pursuing his work in the political and academic arenas, Nuong was exploring her many interests in the world of visual art.Nuong Van-Dinh Tran, a Fine Art artist, was trained as a painter and a printmaker at the Corcoran School of Art, and earned her MFA at the George Washington University..Nuong Van-Dinh Tran, a Founding Member of the Washington Printmakers Gallery, has her work featured in The National Museum of Women in the Arts, The National Museum of American Art, The Smithsonian Institution, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, The Library of Congress Fine Prints Collection, the Permanent Collection of the Pushkin Museum, Moscow, and in many private collections.
Publications
His publications include hundreds of articles and essays, two major textbooks :Independence Liberation Revolution: An Approach to the Understanding of The Third World; Communication and Diplomacy in a Changing World. He also wrote two novels about the Vietnam War: No Passenger on the River (1965) and Blue Dragon White Tiger (1983).
He was a contributor (for Asia) and editorial advisor to The International Encyclopedia of Communications. In recent years, he frequently visited Southeast Asia and Vietnam and has written an article on his native city of Hue in the November 1989 issue of the National Geographic Magazine. He co-authored an Insight Guides book on Vietnam which was translated into several languages (including German and French).
References
- ^ "Biography of Tran & Nuong Van Dinh". Veterans of Hope.
- ^ "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1958–1960. Vietnam: Volume I". Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, United States Department of State.
- ^ "Nuong Van Dinh Tran". Washington PrinMakers Gallery.
- ^ "Tran Van Dinh 's books". Amazon.com.