Memory Is Another Country : Women of the Vietnamese Diaspora by Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen (2009, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherBloomsbury Publishing USA
ISBN-100313360278
ISBN-139780313360275
eBay Product ID (ePID)73207430

Product Key Features

Number of Pages228 Pages
Publication NameMemory Is Another Country : Women of the Vietnamese Diaspora
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2009
SubjectWomen, Asia / Southeast Asia, Human Geography, Emigration & Immigration, Military / Vietnam War, Asia / General, Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Women's Studies, World
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaSocial Science, Biography & Autobiography, History
AuthorNathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.6 in
Item Weight17.6 Oz
Item Length9.2 in
Item Width6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceCollege Audience
LCCN2009-021942
Reviews"The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." - Reference & Research Book News, "Similar in style to Jung ChangÕs enthralling accounts of revolutionary China (Wild Swans: three daughters of China , 1991), this book revisits the final days of the American war through the eyes of Vietnamese women. The stories are deeply personal, compelling, and eloquently retold." Ohio University Libraries Southeast Asia Collection Blog, "The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." Reference & Research Book News, "Nguyen makes a brilliant contribution to the third wave of scholarship...Her focus on women is valuable...pathbreaking book...Essential. All levels/libraries." -- Choice "Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen's book fills an important gap in current scholarship on South Vietnamese women's experiences during war and in diaspora. . . . The personal stories of the women interviewed are vividly narrated and rich in detail. . . . The stories recounted here are an important part of modern Vietnamese history. History often privileges victors. After the South's defeat in 1975, pro-South Vietnamese women's stories have been rarely heard, and they deserve to be. Nguyen's book fills the void and in so doing enriches the existing scholarship on memory, trauma, and diaspora." -- American Historical Review "The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." -- Reference & Research Book News "Similar in style to Jung Chang's enthralling accounts of revolutionary China ( Wild Swans: three daughters of China , 1991), this book revisits the final days of the American war through the eyes of Vietnamese women. The stories are deeply personal, compelling, and eloquently retold." -- Ohio University Libraries Southeast Asia Collection Blog "Nguyen's very accessible and engaging work will be of interest to both an academic audience of students and scholars and the broader audience with an interest in women's studies, ethnic studies, refugee studies, and Asian-American studies." -- MultiCultural Review "This is a poignant and beautifully presented work about a community most Australians have lived alongside for decades... Reading it should jolt us out of our complacency." -- Australian Book Review "One of the strengths of this collection is that the women all had different experiences that they reacted to differently. Therefore, while loss, devastation and grief can't be escaped as a common theme, the women do not blend into archetypes. The chapters begin with loss, symbolized by the family photographs that were lost or destroyed. The difference in the recollections of two sisters who shared the same traumas is particularly interesting. Other chapters focus on female soldiers, war memories, intermarriage outside the culture, both before and after leaving Viet Nam and the reactions of those who returned to visit as well as those who refused to do so. The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." -- Book News "...author Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen offers compelling first-person accounts by women who fled Vietnam in 1975." -- The VVA Veteran, "…author Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen offers compelling first-person accounts by women who fled Vietnam in 1975." - The VVA Veteran, "Nguyen makes a brilliant contribution to the third wave of scholarship…Her focus on women is valuable…pathbreaking book…Essential. All levels/libraries." - Choice, "Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen's book fills an important gap in current scholarship on South Vietnamese women's experiences during war and in diaspora. . . . The personal stories of the women interviewed are vividly narrated and rich in detail. . . . The stories recounted here are an important part of modern Vietnamese history. History often privileges victors. After the South's defeat in 1975, pro-South Vietnamese women's stories have been rarely heard, and they deserve to be. Nguyen's book fills the void and in so doing enriches the existing scholarship on memory, trauma, and diaspora." - American Historical Review, "The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." - Reference and Research Book News, "One of the strengths of this collection is that the women all had different experiences that they reacted to differently. Therefore, while loss, devastation and grief can't be escaped as a common theme, the women do not blend into archetypes. The chapters begin with loss, symbolized by the family photographs that were lost or destroyed. The difference in the recollections of two sisters who shared the same traumas is particularly interesting. Other chapters focus on female soldiers, war memories, intermarriage outside the culture, both before and after leaving Viet Nam and the reactions of those who returned to visit as well as those who refused to do so. The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives." - Book News, "One of the strengths of this collection is that the women all had different experiences that they reacted to differently. Therefore, while loss, devastation and grief can't be escaped as a common theme, the women do not blend into archetypes. The chapters begin with loss, symbolized by the family photographs that were lost or destroyed. The difference in the recollections of two sisters who shared the same traumas is particularly interesting. Other chapters focus on female soldiers, war memories, intermarriage outside the culture, both before and after leaving Viet Nam and the reactions of those who returned to visit as well as those who refused to do so. The 'living history' that this book represents is a beautifully realized portrait of ordinary women who were forced into extraordinary lives."Book News, "This is a poignant and beautifully presented work about a community most Australians have lived alongside for decades… Reading it should jolt us out of our complacency." - Australian Book Review, "Similar in style to Jung Chang's enthralling accounts of revolutionary China ( Wild Swans: three daughters of China , 1991), this book revisits the final days of the American war through the eyes of Vietnamese women. The stories are deeply personal, compelling, and eloquently retold." - Ohio University Libraries Southeast Asia Collection Blog, "Nguyen's very accessible and engaging work will be of interest to both an academic audience of students and scholars and the broader audience with an interest in women's studies, ethnic studies, refugee studies, and Asian-American studies." - MultiCultural Review
Dewey Edition22
Number of Volumes1 vol.
Dewey Decimal305.48/895922
Table Of ContentList of Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Lost Photographs 2. Sisters and Memories 3. Women in Uniform 4. Fragments of War 5. Love across Cultures 6. Return Journeys Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
SynopsisThe act of remembering is a means of bringing the past alive and an imaginative way of dealing with loss. It has been the subject of much recent scholarship and is of particular relevance at a time of widespread transnational migration. This book is a valuable and original contribution to the field of diaspora studies. Based on in-depth oral narratives of forty Vietnamese women, it deals with themes both universal and specific to this diaspora: divergent memories in families, the significance of homeland, the return to Vietnam, cross-cultural relationships, intergenerational tensions, and the issues of silence and unspoken trauma among Vietnamese refugees. It is the first study to apply memory and trauma theories to a substantial base of oral narratives by Vietnamese women in the West. Nguyen argues that understanding of these narratives provides not only an insight into the way Vietnamese women have dealt with loss, but also illuminates the experience of the wider Vietnamese diaspora and other refugees., 2010 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title The act of remembering is a means of bringing the past alive and an imaginative way of dealing with loss. It has been the subject of much recent scholarship and is of particular relevance at a time of widespread transnational migration. This book is a valuable and original contribution to the field of diaspora studies. Based on in-depth oral narratives of forty Vietnamese women, it deals with themes both universal and specific to this diaspora: divergent memories in families, the significance of homeland, the return to Vietnam, cross-cultural relationships, intergenerational tensions, and the issues of silence and unspoken trauma among Vietnamese refugees. It is the first study to apply memory and trauma theories to a substantial base of oral narratives by Vietnamese women in the West. Nguyen argues that understanding of these narratives provides not only an insight into the way Vietnamese women have dealt with loss, but also illuminates the experience of the wider Vietnamese diaspora and other refugees.
LC Classification NumberDS559.913.N46 2009

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