George A. Kennedy (sinologist)

George A. Kennedy
Born (1901-05-07)May 7, 1901
Moganshan, Zhejiang Province, Qing Empire
Died August 15, 1960(1960-08-15) (aged 59)
At sea
Nationality American
Fields Chinese language, literature
Institutions Yale University
Alma mater University of Berlin (Ph.D.)
Union Theological Seminary
Academic advisors Otto Franke
Erich Haenisch
Notable students John DeFrancis
Spouse Jean Wilson
Chinese name
Chinese 金守拙

George Alexander Kennedy (17 May 1901  15 August 1960), was an American sinologist known for his studies of classical Chinese and the teaching of Chinese to students.

Life and career

George Kennedy was born on 17 May 1901 in Moganshan, Zhejiang Province, China, where his parents Alexander and Ada Kennedy were serving as Protestant missionaries. Although his family spoke English at home, Kennedy grew up speaking the local Chinese dialect, a form of Wu Chinese, and often said that Chinese was his native language.[1] The Kennedy family left China in 1918 after George's father and his brother, Fred Kennedy, both died. They returned to the United States, where Kennedy attended the College of Wooster. From 1922 to 1925 he studied theology at the Western Theological Seminary and the Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. During this time he became friends with Luther Carrington Goodrich, who later became professor of Chinese at Columbia University.

He returned to China in 1926 and taught English and Chinese in Shanghai. In 1932, Kennedy went to the University of Berlin, where he studied Chinese and Mongolian under Otto Franke and Erich Haenisch. In 1937, Kennedy completed his Ph.D. with dissertation on the role of confession in Chinese law. He had previously returned to the United States and worked in the Orientalia department of the Library of Congress under Arthur W. Hummel, Sr., writing 72 entries in Hummel's biographical dictionary, Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. In 1936 he began teaching Chinese at Yale University. He was made an assistant professor in 1937, an associate professor in 1943, and full professor in 1954, the rank he held upon his sudden death in 1960.[1] During World War II, Kennedy served as the director of the Army Specialized Training Program at Yale from 1942 to 1944.[1]

In 1960, Kennedy was traveling in Asia visiting some friends and members of his family. In early August 1960, Kennedy planned to return to the United States, and boarded a ship in Yokohama, Japan bound for San Francisco. During the voyage, Kennedy, who had not been feeling well but had not sought medical attention, died of a heart attack. An autopsy revealed he had a number of large tumors in his body, but had chosen not to have any cancer treatments.

Kennedy was the principal author of the Yale Romanization of Mandarin.

Selected works

References

Footnotes
Works cited
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