Benedict Anderson

Birthday August 26, 1936

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Kunming, Yunnan, China

DEATH DATE 2015, Batu, East Java, Indonesia (79 years old)

Nationality China

#48831 Most Popular

1700

The family descended from the Anderson family of Ardbrake, Bothriphnie, Scotland, who settled in Ireland in the early 1700s.

1798

Major Purcell O'Gorman was in turn the son of Nicholas Purcell O'Gorman who had been involved with the Republican Society of United Irishmen during the 1798 Rising, later becoming Secretary of the Catholic Association in the 1820s.

1848

Benedict Anderson took his middle names from the cousin of Major Purcell O'Gorman, Richard O'Gorman, who was one of the leaders of the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848.

1914

Anderson's maternal grandfather Trevor Bigham was the Deputy Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police from 1914 to 1931.

One of Anderson's grandmothers, Lady Frances O'Gorman, belonged to the Gaelic Mac Gormáin clan of County Clare and was the daughter of the Irish Home Rule MP Major Purcell O'Gorman.

1936

Benedict Richard O'Gorman Anderson (August 26, 1936 – December 13, 2015) was an Anglo-Irish political scientist and historian who lived and taught in the United States.

Anderson was born on August 26, 1936, in Kunming, China, to an Anglo-Irish father and English mother.

His father, James Carew O'Gorman Anderson, was an official with Chinese Maritime Customs.

1941

Anderson's family moved to California in 1941 to avoid the invading Japanese during the Second Sino-Japanese War and then to Ireland in 1945.

He studied at Eton College, where he won the Newcastle Scholarship, and went on to attend King's College, Cambridge.

While at Cambridge, he became an anti-imperialist during the Suez Crisis, which influenced his later work as a Marxist and anti-colonialist thinker.

1957

He earned a classics degree from Cambridge in 1957 before attending Cornell University, where he concentrated on Indonesia as a research interest and in 1967 received his Ph.D. in government studies.

His doctoral advisor at Cornell was Southeast Asian scholar George Kahin.

1965

His work on the "Cornell Paper", which disputed the official story of Indonesia's 30 September Movement and the subsequent anti-Communist purges of 1965–1966, led to his expulsion from that country.

Benedict Anderson was the elder brother of the historian Perry Anderson.

The violence following the September 1965 coup attempt that led to Suharto taking power in Indonesia disillusioned Anderson, who wrote that it "felt like discovering that a loved one is a murderer".

Therefore, while Anderson was still a graduate student at Cornell, he anonymously co-wrote the "Cornell Paper" with Ruth T. McVey that debunked the official Indonesian government accounts of the abortive coup of the 30 September Movement and the subsequent anti-Communist purges of 1965–66.

The "Cornell Paper" was widely disseminated by Indonesian dissidents.

1971

One of two foreign witnesses at the show trial of Communist Party of Indonesia general secretary Sudisman in 1971, Anderson published a translated version of the latter's unsuccessful testimony.

1972

As a result of his actions, Anderson was in 1972 expelled from Indonesia and banned from reentering, a restriction that lasted until 1998 when Suharto resigned to be replaced by B. J. Habibie as president.

Anderson was fluent in many languages relevant to his Southeast Asian field, including Indonesian, Javanese, Thai and Tagalog, as well as the major European languages.

After the American experience in the Vietnam War and the subsequent wars between Communist nations such as the Cambodian–Vietnamese War and the Sino-Vietnamese War, he began studying the origins of nationalism while continuing his previous work on the relationship between language and power.

1983

Anderson is best known for his 1983 book Imagined Communities, which explored the origins of nationalism.

A polyglot with an interest in Southeast Asia, he was the Aaron L. Binenkorb Professor of International Studies, Government & Asian Studies at Cornell University.

Anderson is best known for his 1983 book Imagined Communities, in which he described the major factors contributing to the emergence of nationalism in the world during the past three centuries.

Anderson defined a nation as "an imagined political community [that is] imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign".

(See below for a more extensive discussion.)

Anderson is best known for his 1983 book, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, in which he examined how nationalism led to the creation of nations, or as the title puts it, imagined communities.

In this case, an "imagined community" does not mean that a national community is fake, but rather refers to Anderson's position that any community so large that its members do not know each another on a face-to-face basis must be imagined to some degree.

According to Anderson, previous Marxist and liberal thinkers did not fully appreciate nationalism's power, writing in his book that "Unlike most other isms, nationalism has never produced its own grand thinkers: no Hobbeses, Tocquevilles, Marxes or Webers."

Anderson begins his work by bringing up three paradoxes of nationalism that he would address in the work:

In Anderson's theory of nationalism, the phenomenon only came about as people began rejecting three key beliefs about their society:

1994

Anderson was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1994.

1998

In 1998, Anderson's return trip to Indonesia was sponsored by the Indonesian publication Tempo, and he gave a public speech in which he criticized the Indonesia opposition for "its timidity and historical amnesia—especially with regard to the massacres of 1965–1966".

2002

He taught at Cornell until his retirement in 2002, when he became a professor emeritus of International Studies.

After his retirement, he spent most of his time traveling throughout South East Asia.

2015

Anderson died in Batu, a hill town near Malang, Indonesia, in his sleep on December 13, 2015.

According to close friend Tariq Ali, Anderson died of heart failure.

He had been in the middle of correcting the proofs of his memoir A Life Beyond Boundaries, which had initially been published in Japanese translation.

He was survived by two adopted sons of Indonesian origin.