Tjan Tjoe Som (Chinese: 曾珠森, 1903–1969) was an Indonesian Chinese intellectual and sinologist at the University of Indonesia.
Early life
Tjan was the son of a prominent Muslim Chinese family in Surakarta, Dutch East Indies.[1][2] His first education was in the local HCS (Dutch-Chinese School) and then in the AMS (General Middle School) in Yogyakarta.[2]
His brother Tjan Tjoe Siem also became an academic (of Javanese literature).
Academic career
In 1935 he went to the Netherlands to study Sinology at Leiden University.[2] He obtained a PhD in Sinology in 1949 and was appointed as a professor there.[2] In 1952 he returned to Indonesia and became head of the department of Sinology at the FSUI (Fakultas Sastra Universitas Indonesia - Literature Department at the University of Indonesia).[2]
Political activities
In the late 1950s he became associated with left-wing politics at a high level. In 1958 he joined the Himpunan Sardjana Indonesia (Indonesian: Indonesian Scholars' Association), a mass organization affiliated with the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI).[2] He was appointed as director of the Universitas Rakjat (Indonesian: People's university), a PKI educational network.[2] He was also an advisor for the Chinese language edition of Warta Bhakti, a major left-wing newspaper in Indonesia at that time.[2]
He died in Bandung in February 1969.
Selected works
- Po-hu-t'ung = The comprehensive discussions in the White Tiger Hall: a contribution to the history of classical studies in the Han period (1949)
- De plaats van de studie der kanonieke boeken in de Chinese filosofie (1950)
- Eastern and Western World (1953)
- Tugas ilmu pengetahuan (1959)
References
- ↑ Salmon, Claudine (1981). Literature in Malay by the Chinese of Indonesia : a provisional annotated bibliography. Paris: Editions de la Maison des sciences de l'homme. pp. 359–60. ISBN 9780835705929.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Suryadinata, Leo (2015). Prominent Indonesian Chinese : biographical sketches (4th ed.). ISEAS Publishing. pp. 346–7. ISBN 9789814620505.