He was born in
Penarth, Glamorgan, Wales to Charles Harold and Mabelle Graham, the elder of two children. His father was originally a
coal merchant who moved to
Malaya to start a rubber plantation, and died in 1928 of malaria.[1] Graham attended Ellesmore College, Shropshire, 1932–1937, and went on to read Theology at
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (graduating in 1940), and Chinese at the
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London (graduating in 1949). In 1950 he was appointed Lecturer in Classical Chinese at SOAS, promoted to Professor in 1971, and to Professor Emeritus after his retirement in 1984. He lived in
Borehamwood.[2]
Disputers of the Tao: philosophical argument in ancient China (La Salle, Illinois: Open Court, 1989) [trans. into Chinese by Zhang Haiyan "Lun dao zhe: Zhongguo gudai zhexue lun bian", Beijing: Zhongguo shehui kexue chubanshe, 2003)
Poems of the West Lake, translations from the Chinese (London: Wellsweep, 1990)
Chuang-tzu: The Inner Chapters and other Writings from the Book of Chuang-tzu (London: Unwin Paperbacks, 1986)
Divisions in early Mohism reflected in the core chapters of Mo-tzu (Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 1985)
Chuang-tzu: textual notes to a partial translation (London: SOAS, 1982)
Later Mohist Logic, Ethics and Science (Hong Kong and London, 1978)
Poems of the Late T'ang (Baltimore, Penguin Books, 1965)
The Book of Lieh-tzu, a new translation (London: John Murray, 1960)
The Nung-Chia ‘School of the Tillers’ and the Origin of the Peasant Utopianism in China // Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol.42 no.1, 1978, pp. 66–100. Reprinted in Graham A.C. Studies in Early Chinese Philosophy and Philosophical Literature. SUNY Press, 1986.
Festschrift
Having a Word with Angus Graham: At Twenty-Five Years into His Immortality (Edited by
Carine Defoort &
Roger T. Ames. SUNY Press, 2018)