David G. Marr
David George Marr is an American/Australian historian specializing in the modern history of Vietnam.
Marr was born in Macon, Georgia, the son of Henry George and Louise M.. Marr studied at Dartmouth College, before joining the US Marine Corps as an intelligence officer. Marr learned Vietnamese in the US, then was assigned to Vietnam in 1962. He married there in April 1963, and was reassigned to marine Intelligence in Hawaii a month later. After leaving the Marines in 1964 he sought to understand the roots of Vietnamese patriotism as a graduate student at UC Berkeley. He taught at University of California, Berkeley and as assistant professor at Cornell University, 1969–72, while becoming increasingly engaged in documenting the case for withdrawing from Viet Nam, notably as co-director of the Indochina Resource Center, 1971-5. In 1975 he moved to Australia with his family, in research positions as Fellow, Senior Fellow and finally Professor at the Australian National University's Research School of Pacific Studies, in Canberra. He has also been editor of Vietnam Today. He is currently Emeritus Professor and Visiting Fellow, School of Culture, History & Language at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University.Publications
- Vietnamese Anticolonialism 1885-1925, University of California Press, 1971
- Vietnamese Tradition on Trial, 1920-1945, University of California Press, 1981.
- Vietnam. World Bibliographical Series, vol.147, Clio Press, 1992.
- Vietnam 1945: The Quest for Power, University of California Press, 1995.
- Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution University of California Press 0520954971, 2013
- Perceptions of the Past in Southeast Asia co-edited, Heinemann, 1979..