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Building a Republican Nation in Vietnam, 1920-1963 [Kietas viršelis]

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Western observers have long considered communism to be synonymous with Vietnams modern historical experience. Eager to make sense of the North Vietnamese victory in the Vietnam War, scholars and journalists have spilled much ink on the history of Vietnamese communists. But this preoccupation has obscured the diversity of ideas and experiences that defined Vietnam in the twentieth century, in which communism represented just one of many tendencies. Building a Republican Nation in Postcolonial Vietnam, 19201963, posits that republicanism shaped modern Vietnam no less profoundly than communism. Republicans championed representative government, the universal rights of man, civil liberties, and the primacy of the nation. These ideas infused the thinking of Vietnamese reformers, dissidents, and revolutionaries from the 1900s onward, including many men and women who went on to lead the struggle for independence. Republicanism was also one of the chief inspirations for the establishment of the Republic of Vietnam (also known as South Vietnam) in 1955.

This interdisciplinary volume brings together eleven essays by historians, political scientists, literary scholars, and sociologists, who make use of fresh sources to study the development of republicanism from the colonial period to the First Republic of Vietnam (19551963). The introduction by coeditors Nu-Anh Tran and Tuong Vu critically analyzes the existing scholarship on the First Republic, explains how the concept of republicanism can illuminate developments in the Saigon-based state, and situates the regime in a comparative context with South Korea. Peter Zinomans chapter reviews the historiography on republicanism and modern Vietnam and heralds the arrival of the "republican moment" in the field of Vietnam studies. Several chapters by Nguyn Lng Hi Khōi, Martina Thucnhi Nguyen, and Yen Vu examine the transformation of republican ideas. Nu-Anh Tran and Duy Lap Nguyen explore competing concepts of democracy and the factional politics of the First Republic. The essays by Jason Picard, Cindy Nguyen, Hoąng Phong Tun, Nguyn Th Minh, and Y Thien Nguyen analyze nation- and state-building efforts in the 1950s and 1960s. Collectively, the essays give voice to Vietnamese republicans, from the ideas they espoused to the institutions they built and the legacies they left behind.
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xi
Introduction: Rethinking Vietnamese Republicanism Nu-Anh Trcm and Tuong Vu 1(25)
Chapter One A Republican Moment in the Study of Modern Vietnam
26(17)
Peter Zinoman
Chapter Two Early Republicans' Concept of the Nation: Tran Trong Kim and Viet Nam su Iuoc
43(18)
Nguyen Luang Hai Khoi
Chapter Three The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Colonial Republicanism in the 1930s
61(20)
Martina Thucnhi Nguyen
Chapter Four Tran Van Tung's Vision of a New Nationalism for a New Vietnam
81(19)
Yen Vu
Chapter Five How Democratic Should Vietnam Be? The Constitutional Transition of 1955-1956 and the Debate on Democracy
100(20)
Nu-Anh Tran
Chapter Six Personalism, Liberal Capitalism, and the Strategic Hamlet Campaign
120(23)
Duy Lap Nguyen
Chapter Seven "They Eat the Flesh of Children": Migration, Resettlement, and Sectionalism in South Vietnam, 1954-1957
143(21)
Jason A. Picard
Chapter Eight Creating the National Library in Saigon: Colonial Legacies, Republican Visions, and Reading Publics, 1946-1958
164(22)
Cindy Nguyen
Chapter Nine Striving for the Quintessence: Building a New Identity of National Literature Based on Creative Freedom
186(16)
Hoang Phong Tuan
Nguyen Thi Minh
Chapter Ten When State Propaganda Becomes Social Knowledge
202(29)
Y. Thien Nguyen
Bibliography 231(16)
Contributors 247(4)
Index 251
Nu-Anh Tran is assistant professor in the Department of History and the Asian and Asian American Studies Institute at the University of Connecticut. Tuong Vu is professor and department head of the Political Science Department and director of the US-Vietnam Research Center at the University of Oregon.

Martina Thucnhi Nguyen is assistant professor of history at Baruch College, City University of New York.