Anthony Sampson

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Anthony Terrell Seward Sampson (3 August 1926 – 18 December 2004) was a British writer and journalist. His most notable and successful book was Anatomy of Britain, which was published in 1962<ref name=McCrum>Template:Cite news</ref> and was followed by five more "Anatomies", updating the original book under various titles. He was the grandson of the linguist John Sampson, of whom he wrote a biography, The Scholar Gypsy: The Quest For A Family Secret (1997).<ref name=Thompson>Template:Cite news</ref> He also gave Nelson Mandela advice on Mandela's famous 1964 defence speech at the trial which led to his conviction for life.

Early life and education

Sampson was born in Billingham, County Durham,<ref name=Krempels>Template:Cite news</ref> son of Lieutenant Colonel Michael Trevisky Sampson, King's Royal Rifle Corps, OBE, MC, chief scientist for Imperial Chemical Industries,<ref>Dictionary of African Biography, ed. Henry Louis Gates, jr, Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong, Oxford University Press USA, 2012, p. 262</ref><ref>British Plastics and Moulded Products Trader, vol. 12, British Plastics Federation, 1940, p. 262</ref> and Phyllis, daughter of the botanist and geologist Sir Albert Seward. Michael Sampson was assigned as technical director of ICI to the Billingham nitrogen works.<ref name="auto1">Who's Who, A. & C. Black, 1975, p. 2781</ref><ref name="auto">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Writing the Empire: The McIlwraiths, 1853-1949, Eva-Marie Kröller, University of Toronto Press, 2021, pp. 12, 355-6</ref> He was educated at Westminster School.<ref name=Thompson/> In 1944 he joined the Royal Navy, and by the time he left, in 1947, he was a sub-lieutenant in the RN Volunteer Reserve.<ref name=Krempels /> He then studied English at Christ Church, Oxford.<ref name=Krempels />

Career

In 1951 Sampson went to Johannesburg, South Africa, to become editor of the magazine Drum, remaining there for four years.<ref name=Krempels /> After his return to the United Kingdom, he joined the editorial staff of The Observer, where he worked from 1955 to 1966.

He was the author of a series of books, starting with Anatomy of Britain (1962), in which he explored the workings of the British state and other major social institutions, in particular the large corporation. He took an interest in broad political and economic power structures, but he also saw power as personal. He occasionally offered psychoanalytical interpretations of power players, as in this passage from The Money Lenders:

"[Bankers] seem specially conscious of time, always aware that time is money. There is always a sense of restraint and tension. (Is it part of the connection which Freud observed between compulsive neatness, anal eroticism and interest in money?)"

Sampson was a personal friend of Nelson Mandela before Mandela became politically active. In 1964 Sampson attended the Rivonia Trial in support of Mandela and other ANC leaders, and in 1999 he published the authorised biography of Mandela.<ref name=Thompson />

Sampson was also a founding member of the now defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP).<ref name=Krempels />

Sampson's personal archive, catalogued by the Bodleian Library, was made public for the first time in 2012.<ref name=McCrum />

Personal life

On his return from South Africa in 1965, Sampson married Sally Virginia, daughter of medical practitioner Philip Graeme Bentlif, MD, MRCS, LRCP, of Jersey.<ref name="auto1"/><ref name="auto"/> She was a Justice of the Peace and was a bench chairman of the Youth Court at Camberwell, London.

Bibliography

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Books

Critical studies, reviews and biography

References

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