OBITUARY> Wm. Theodore de Bary (1919-2017)
Forwarded from the Korean Studies list serve
William Theodore de Bary, 1919-2017 From: Brett de Bary (bmd2@cornell.edu [1]) Dear Colleagues, It is with deep sadness that I announce that my father, Wm. Theodore de Bary, passed away peacefully at his home, Hōtokudō, in Tappan, New York, on July 14, 2017. He taught many of you, who are now such distinguished Asianists, as undergraduates or graduate students at Columbia. He remembered you and took great pride in your achievements until the end of his long life. I attach a preliminary obituary. The funeral was held on Tuesday, July 18, 2017, and there will be a formal memorial service at Columbia University in the fall. Best, Brett de Bary William Theodore de Bary (1919-2017) Wm. Theodore de Bary, acclaimed scholar of East Asian thought and a leader in the development of Asian Studies in the United States, died peacefully in his home, Hotokudo, in Tappan, New York, on July 14, 2017. John Mitchell Mason Professor Emeritus and Provost Emeritus of Columbia University at the time of his death, de Bary continued to teach after his formal retirement in 1989. Although weakened by a heart condition, he completed grading the papers for his last course in May, 2017. de Bary, one of five children born to Mildred and Wilhelm de Bary in Bronx, New York, in 1919, grew up in Leonia, New Jersey. Entering Columbia College as a scholarship student, he began the study of Chinese as a sophomore in 1938. In 1942, while a Master’s candidate at Harvard, he was recruited by the United States Navy for intensive training in Japanese and served as an intelligence officer during the Pacific War. He achieved the rank of Lieutenant Commander and worked briefly for the Office of Naval Intelligence in 1946. His experiences in Okinawa, Japan, and China during the war persuaded him of the importance of continuing to learn from East Asian cultures. He always credited his wife, Fanny Brett de Bary, for inspiring him to return to do a Ph. D. at Columbia in 1947. Together with his friend Donald Keene, he studied under Ryusaku Tsunoda, who had recently been released from an interment camp for Japanese-Americans and who became a revered mentor. In 1949, he was a Fulbright fellow at Beijing University when Communist troops arrived in the city. While still a graduate student in 1948, de Bary was made chair of a committee charged with extending the undergraduate core curriculum in Western civilizations to include Asian civilizations. He recruited gifted colleagues to join him in assembling a series of source books containing translations of major classical and modern texts of Chinese, Japanese, and Indian traditions. These have been updated and revised on several occasions and are currently used as textbooks by numerous universities throughout the world. More recently, Professor de Bary served as editor for an addition to the series covering Korean civilization and encouraged the development of a companion work on Vietnamese civilization by colleagues at Columbia. He went on to author and edited over twenty books. His last book, "The Great Civilized Conversation: Education for a World Community", was published in 2013. In it, he established concrete links among Islamic, Indian, Chinese, Japanese, and Western classics, emphasizing shared understandings of humanity and shared concepts of civility. Reflecting on history's great scholar-teachers and what their methods can teach us today, he reflected on the power of "The Analects of Confucius", "The Tale of Genji", and "The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon" as he experienced them in the classroom. From 1970 to 1978, de Bary served as Provost of Columbia University, where he worked to balance the University’s new endeavors with the values that had inspired him when he first attended the University as an undergraduate. During this time, he raised the endowment for and established Columbia’s Heyman Center for the Humanities. Throughout his career, de Bary believed strongly that undergraduate education was a central mission of the university, and he saw this mission as a responsibility to be shared by all segments of the University. He also worked assiduously to promote studies of the humanities as a necessary adjunct to scientific research and professional education. He believed firmly that the classics were best read and discussed between students and faculty in small groups. Teaching pro bono through May, 2017, he learned shortly before his death that his Fall course, “Nobility and Civility,” was oversubscribed. For his scholarship and dedication to human understanding on a global level, he had received the highest awards from the United States, Japan, and Taiwan in addition to many awards and honors at Columbia University. He was awarded the National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama for fostering a global conversation based on the common values and experiences shared by all cultures, helping to bridge differences and build trust. He was also a member of Japan’s Order of the Rising Sun and, in 2016, was honored to be awarded the distinguished Tang Prize from the Tang Foundation in Taiwan for his work in Sinology. Professor de Bary’s wife, Mary Fanny Brett de Bary, of Northport, New York, and his daughter, Mary Catherine de Bary Sleight, pre-deceased him. He is survived by three of his children, Brett de Bary Nee, a professor of Japanese Literature at Cornell University, Paul de Bary, an attorney and financial advisor in New York, and Mary Beatrice De Bary Heinrichs, a teacher at the Academy Hill School, his son-in-law, Victor Nee, a Professor of Sociology at Cornell University, his daughter-in-law, Stefana de Bary, and her son Alexandru Marinescu, and a son-in-law, William Sleight, of San Rafael, California. He is also survived by eight grandchildren and their spouses, William Nee, of Oakland, California, and David Nee, Ned and Katrina Chapman de Bary of Boston Massachusetts, and John de Bary and Michael Rameley, of New York City, Cynthia Sleight, of Austin Texas, Johanna and Scott Moringiello, Annalies Heinrichs and Damjan DeNoble and Lydia Heinrichs and three great grandchildren, Theodore and Marco Moringiello and Adelaide DeNoble. In his last years, he was supported by a group of extraordinary caregivers and by his fellow parishioners at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Church in Tappan, New York. A funeral mass was held at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish in Tappan, New York, at eleven a.m. on Tuesday, July 18th. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the parish or to the Wm. Theodore de* *Bary and Ainslie T. Embree Fund for Education and Outreach of the Association for Asian Studies (http://www.asian-studies.org [2]*). * [1] mailto:bmd2@cornell.edu [2] http://www.asian-studies.org Read more or reply: https://networks.h-net.org/user/login%3Fdestination%3Dnode/187840
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