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Description About the Authors Table of Contents Reviews Description One of the first books to look at how the Vietnamese themselves experienced the wars for Vietnam, including both the French and the American wars. Combining political, social, and cultural history, Bradley examines how the war was seen both by top policy makers and also everyday soldiers and civilians in both North and South the question of who actually 'won'the war in Vietnam - and why There were many wars for Vietnam, involving the French in the 1950s, the Americans in the 1960s, and between the Vietnamese themselves- this book looks at all of them Looks at how the Vietnamese experienced these wars - from the key decision-makers in Hanoi and Saigon to ordinary people, both northand south, urban andpeasant, civilian and military About the Authors Mark Philip Bradley, Bernadotte E. Schmitt Distinguished Service Professor of International History, University of ChicagoMark Philip Bradley is Bernadotte E. Schmitt Professor of History at The University of Chicago. He is the author of The World Reimagined Americans and Human Rights in the Twentieth Century and Imagining Vietnam and America The Making of Postcolonial Vietnam, 1919-1950, which won the Association for Asian Studies Harry Benda Prize. He is also co-editor of Making the Forever War, Familiar Made Strange American Icons and Artifacts after the Transnational Turn, and Making Sense of the Vietnam Wars. Table of Contents Prelude 1Visions of the Future 2The French War 3The Coming of the American War 4Experiencing War 5War's End 6Coda Further Reading Notes Index Reviews "The first concise history of the conflict that fully integrates Vietnam's "American War" into the more familiar story of America's "Vietnam War". Mark Bradley has succeeded in making the Vietnamese and Americans mutually visible. It is a considerable achievement." - Marilyn B. Young, co-editor of A Companion to the Vietnam War "Consciously written to render the Vietnamese visible in ways too few American histories of the war do . . ." - The Nation
Ha Long Bay in northeast Vietnam consists of more than 1,600 islands and Long Bay in northeast Vietnam consists of more than 1,600 islands and by Luciano Mortula, DreamstimeVietnam is a e Teachings" of Confucianism, Taoism, and mountainous terrain, forests, wetlands, and long coastline contain many different habitats that support a great variety of wildlife. Some 270 types of mammals, 180 reptiles, 80 amphibians, and 800 bird species reside in rare and unusual animals live in Vietnam, including giant catfish, Indochinese tigers, Saola antelopes, and Sumatran rhinos. The government has set up 30 parks and reserves to protect its animals, but their survival is in doubt because much of their habitat has been cleared for lumber or to grow forests once covered most of Vietnam, but over the past few hundred years, logging has reduced the forest cover to only about 19 percent. The government has launched a replanting program in an attempt to restore these & ECONOMYVietnam is a socialist state governed by the Communist Party of Vietnam. A president, chosen by the National Assembly, is head of state and commander of the armed forces. An appointed prime minister runs the main exports include crude oil, seafood, rice, shoes, wooden products, machinery, electronics, coffee, and clothing. Between 1975 and the late 1980s, Vietnam traded mainly with other communist countries, but since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, it has expanded trade with other first civilizations arose in the Red River Valley some 5,000 years ago. These northern tribes flourished until 207 when their region was conquered by a Chinese lord, who established a kingdom called Nam 111 Nam Viet became part of the Chinese empire, which ruled the north until 939, when a Vietnamese commander named Ngo Quyen organized a revolt that drove the Chinese out. Later dynasties renamed the country Dai Viet and gradually extended their territory south. By the mid-1500s, Dai Viet was divided between rival kingdoms the Trinh in the north and the Nguyen in the 1802, a Nguyen lord, with the help of the French, defeated the Trinh and renamed the country Vietnam. By 1890, however, France had taken over took control briefly during World War II, and when the war ended with Japan's defeat in 1945, Ho Chi Minh, the leader of the Vietnamese Communist Party, declared Vietnam an independent nation. French attempts to retake Vietnam led to war with the communist Vietnamese, called Viet Minh. Fighting ended in 1954 with the partition of the country into communist North and non-communist South 1957, communist rebels in the south, called Viet Cong, rose up. War between the North and South ensued, and other countries, including the United States, Russia, and China, soon became involved. The fighting lasted until 1975, when the communists overran the south and took its capital, "Destination World"Watch "Destination World"
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