Tracy Burr Strong

Tracy Burr Strong obituary, Chandler's Ford/New York City, Hampshire

Tracy Burr Strong

Tracy Strong Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on May 31, 2022.
Tracy B. Strong, Professor of Political Theory and Philosophy at the University of Southampton and Distinguished Professor (Emeritus) of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego, of Chandler's Ford/New York City, died suddenly and unexpectedly at home in Chandler's Ford, Hampshire, England on the 11th of May, 2022. He was 78.
Strong was born in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in Weixian (Weihsien), China during World War II to a Congregationalist missionary couple, Katherine Burr Strong (nee Stiven) and Robbins Strong. As the third Tracy in his family, his parents named him Tracy Burr to preserve his mother's middle name (US Vice-President Aaron Burr was a distant relative). When he was a few months old, his family was repatriated on the Swedish prisoner-of-war ship, the Gripsholm. After a complex journey (according to the China Bulletin of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions #68), the ship arrived in New York on 18 December 1943:
"In general, we were pleasantly surprised by the appearance of the whole group. The youngest, Tracy Burr Strong, seemed the most vigorous of all, and won all hearts (See the next issue of the Missionary Herald for his picture.)."
With such a head-start, Strong would grow up a confirmed expatriate and world traveler, fluent in French, German, and English as well as retaining some limited Mandarin Chinese.
Strong's childhood was spent in Nanjing, China and (briefly) in Seoul, Korea, before his parents would eventually be forced to leave East Asia and relocate to Paris and Geneva, Switzerland, as his father changed jobs with the World YMCA.
Confirmed an Episcopalian, he was educated at (John Calvin's) College de Geneve, before becoming the fifth generation of his family on both sides to graduate from Oberlin College (where he majored in government and fenced foil and played European football [soccer]), earning a B.A. in 1963 and at Harvard University where he obtained his Ph.D. in 1968. He was Henry Kissinger's teaching assistant and not less a member of SDS (Students for a Democratic Society). He was an active leader in the Harvard 1969 strike and the negotiations that led to the founding of the African-American Studies Department.
Strong taught government and political theory at Harvard, University of Pittsburgh, Amherst College, and until his retirement at the University of California at San Diego, where he also served in administration as department chair and Associate Chancellor. He taught in Florence and Barcelona and Lyon and was an official member of the Sudasien Institut in the Interdisciplinary Center of Asian and Transcultural Studies at the University of Heidelberg. He was still teaching, lecturing and mentoring students at the University of Southampton up until the day before his death. Strong never stopped lecturing in universities around the world. In 2015, he was an invited guest of honor of the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries at the official Chinese celebration of the 70th anniversary of their defeat of the Japanese. Tracy was also the subject of a Chinese television documentary filmed in Winchester on 21 December 2020 on his great aunt.
Strong's global interests spanned political theory and philosophy, cultural and intellectual history, as well as film and art. He authored important books and numerous articles on pre-Twentieth Century figures such as Nietzsche, Hobbes, and Rousseau in addition to Carl Schmitt and other contemporary political thinkers in the case of his magisterial, 2012 Politics Without Vision: Thinking Without a Banister in the Twentieth Century. His most recent book is a masterful study of the politics of citizenship in America, Learning One's Native Tongue: Citizenship, Contestation, and Conflict in America (2019). He was editor of Political Theory (1990-2000) in addition to authoring, with Helene Keyssar, Right in Her Soul (1983), a biography of his great-aunt, the leftist journalist and author Anna Louise Strong (1885-1970).
For some time, his first book has been recognized as a classic: Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of Transfiguration (1975), still engaging, a watershed not only in political philosophy but Nietzsche studies. Intellectually engaged until the end, Strong was working on Nietzsche on questions of good and evil - and love - in addition to the influence of Heidegger and Arendt in the life and letters of his long-time friend, Stanley Cavell.
Strong had a long-lasting interest in the music of Wagner and Beethoven and other forms of classical, folk, and rock music: he played both piano and guitar. He also engaged deeply with the works of Samuel Beckett (having played the role of Nagg in an Amherst bilingual production of Endgame), Mark Twain, Shakespeare, and many other writers. His delight in wine and fine dining was equaled by his own expertise in both Chinese and classical French cooking, fostered by his childhood in those nations. His elaborate and frequent dinner parties were a highlight of UCSD departmental life, generally featuring his famous Szechuan sesame noodles.
He is survived by his wife, Babette Babich Strong of Chandler's Ford/New York City, his son David Dadalus Strong Franke and daughter-in-law Kristina Johnson of Los Angeles, California, his daughter Anise Keyssar Strong-Morse, son-in-law Adam Strong-Morse and grandchildren, Mclevy, Robert, and Katharine of Kalamazoo, Michigan; a sister Jeanne R. Strong of Langley, Washington, a brother John S. Strong and sister-in-law Sarah M. Strong of Auburn, Maine. Tracy is also survived by his first wife, Penelope Harger of Greenbank, Washington. Tracy was predeceased by his parents and his second wife, Helene Keyssar.

No flowers but, to remember Tracy, please read his works.

Text by John S. Strong, Babette Babich Strong, and Anise Keyssar Strong-Morse

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May 18, 2023

Babette Strong posted to the memorial.

November 29, 2022

Adam L posted to the memorial.

June 13, 2022

Monique Chu posted to the memorial.

12 Entries

Babette Strong

May 18, 2023

Tracy, just outside of Munich

Adam L

November 29, 2022

I met Tracy along with Babette a couple of times at the Friedrich Nietzsche Society conferences in the UK: I remember that he always listened carefully to my presentations and had very apposite things to say. I was sad to hear of his death, and I will keep reading his books in his memory.

Monique Chu

June 13, 2022

Tracy had beautiful eyes. When he spoke about subjects that interested him, his eyes would sparkle with excitement. Many years ago, after I gave my first seminar talk at the Department of Politics and International Relations at University of Southampton about my research on semiconductors, he came to me speaking with his eyes sparked with excitement. I saw appreciation from his eyes for a nobody like me and felt extremely grateful for his kindness.

On numerous occasions, I was very lucky to have felt cared for by his soft heartedness and compassion. In many ways, he was like a father figure to me, always ready to reach out to me when I needed guidance and assistance.

I also enjoyed many of our conversations about his legendary great aunt Anna Louise, his family connections with China, his 1985 encounter with Deng Xiaoping, his invited attendance in China of a conference about Long March, and his 2015 presence at the grand parade in front of the Tiananmen Square to mark the 70th anniversary of the Chinese defeat of the Japanese.

Tracy also shared with me his passion for research, cooking and family. During our hour-long chat one week before his passing, he passionately told me -once again- about what a great chef he´s especially about making Chinese dumplings, his parents´ resort house by Beidaihe, and how his son and his daughter differed in their personality. In turn, I shared with him my passion about writing my next research monograph about problematic sovereignty and my eagerness to cook for him and his wife some nice Taiwanese food.

We agreed that we would meet up in the early summer...

Despite Tracy´s sad passing, I want to remember his beautiful eyes and his extreme kindness and compassion.

Most important of all, I want to be like him - a lofty figure in his area of expertise with humility and good heartedness.

I will miss him deeply.

Harvey Goldman

June 11, 2022

A towering figure, the loss of whom will grow more obvious by the day, a loss both personal and more general.

Alexander Nehamas

June 11, 2022

I am very sorry that the time difference prevents me from attending.

Tracy was crucial to me when we were both at the University of Pittsburgh in the early seventies. Unfailingly generous, a true intellectual companion, a genuine and faithful friend. We spent many evenings together discussing questions that concerned us both but not necessarily too many other people. Our admiration for Nietzsche bound us together and he taught me-when I was full of the unhistorical optimism of the philosophy of the time-that everything, absolutely everything, has a history. It is a difficult lesson to apply but I have tried to remain true to it and, however imperfectly through the years, to remain true to him and to those he loved.

Sharon Miro

June 10, 2022

a well-honed wit, an incredibly facile mind and a love of all things mortal and immortal, is how I will remember Tracy. Anise & David, you have my love and support all ways.

Alphonso Lingis

June 10, 2022

I am among those who admired Tracy's informed and probing intelligence, his engaging sensibility, his integral friendship. And his complex and storied personality. Visiting with Tracy was enriching and inspiring such that I vividly remember each time.

Roger Green

June 6, 2022

I'm really saddened to hear that Tracy has left us. I was a graduate student of his many years ago and genuinely liked and admired him. I don't think I was a particularly easy graduate student to work with, but Tracy was always patient, thoughtful, and thought-provoking. I also admired him for having lived such an interesting life. Maybe after my time here is up I'll get the chance to talk with him again. I would like really like that.

Gary Jacobson

June 4, 2022

It was a privilege to have Tracy as a friend and colleague. He was a true intellectual in the best and widest sense.

Rick Barrett

June 4, 2022

For me, Tracy is poetry

David Owen

June 2, 2022

This probably won't be that coherent but here are some memories of, and thoughts on, my friend Tracy B Strong.
I first met Tracy through his work on Nietzsche which I admired and used in my graduate thesis. Shortly after I finished the PhD in 1989, and since this was in days before email, I wrote him a letter about something to do with Hegel and Nietzsche that, in the way of young folk, I took the fate of the world to hang on. About a month later I received a careful and generous response of which the last line - aimed at Hegel, I think - struck me: 'One should not think that because there is a first word, there must be a last word.' After that we met typically about once a year in the UK or the USA and exchanged some more letters slowly building a friendship. Then email arrived and the possibility of conversation across distance and time.
In 1999 I was going to be in the US for a few weeks so I let Tracy know and he immediately asked me down to UCSD to give a talk and stay with him and Helene. I was getting the shuttle flight from San Francisco, arrived at the airport early, and was offered a seat on an earlier flight so took it. When I arrived at San Diego, I realised it was 2 hours before Tracy was due to pick me up, so I got the bus to UCSD campus and went and found Tracy's office. He was somewhat flabbergasted so I explained and learnt that taking the bus was not normal white professor conduct, and he spent much of the evening delightedly recounting the story to his colleagues with the explanation 'He's British, he got the bus.' He then cooked a fabulous dinner of grilled prawns.
In 2001, he and Babette arrived, recently married, at Caroline's and my wedding where they were sat with a table of Russians and were rapidly having great fun as Tracy recounted stories of his great aunt Anna Louise teaching English to Trotsky.
About ten years ago, Southampton had the possibility of a Chair in Political Theory and I knew that Tracy was looking to move to Europe so I contacted him on the off chance, not really expecting him to apply to a provincial UK university. But he did, and he came, it has been a gift not just for me (though it was certainly that) but for many colleagues and students who have experienced the gentle wisdom and passionate commitment to teaching that Tracy had.
Tracy was, of course, an astonishingly erudite and brilliant man but the quality of his that I most admired was his ability to listen, actively to listen to anyone at all. When he had just arrived, some friends Mike and Mell generously included him in a dinner invite for Bonfire Night. As Mell said on hearing the news of Tracy's passing, "I only met him once, but he was so kind, he really took the time to listen and understand an uneducated person such as myself [note: Mell is not uneducated!]. Very sorry for your loss. He really was a very special man."
He was - and he was great with my kids. We'd meet in the garden of the King Alfred pub and he'd play maths games with a young Arthur and talk to Miranda about her drawings. When a genuinely good Chinese restaurant opened in Winchester, we tried to have lunch once a week over Ma Po tofu, beef and ox tongue in chilli sauce, stir fried intestines, and such like. Here we came up with the idea of teaching a course on Cinema together which turned out to be a wonderful (if not alway well-organised) experience in which each week one of us would lead on a film and then we'd go into dialogue mode drawing the students into the debate. We'd already worked together on an edition of Weber's Vocation Lectures, and later we had ideas of writing a book on cinema together after Tracy had finished working with Babette on their joint book on The Birth of Tragedy and his book on American Literature and I had finished my current projects.
I have so many great memories of Tracy at our house for new year's eve or dinner, in pubs with friends who were writers, in Shanghai Papa, in the classroom, and in the office with just us chatting. It has been one of the best things in my life to have known hm and become good friends. I will miss him more than I can say, and I wish I could say all this better.

John ferejohn

June 1, 2022

I have admired tracy and his work throughout our careers (we are the same age) and was so sorry to learn that he has left us. My condolences to his family and friends. He cannot be replaced... but we can enjoy his recipes. Godspeed.

John

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May 18, 2023

Babette Strong posted to the memorial.

November 29, 2022

Adam L posted to the memorial.

June 13, 2022

Monique Chu posted to the memorial.