Vietnam's Lost Revolution - Ngô Ðình Diem's Failure to Build an Independent Nation, 1955-1963
Author(s): Geoffrey C. Stewart
RARE AND COLLECTIBLE | HISTORY
Vietnam's Lost Revolution employs newly-released archival material from Vietnam to examine the rise and fall of the Special Commissariat for Civic Action in the First Republic of Vietnam, and in so doing reassesses the origins of the Vietnam War. A cornerstone of Ng Đ nh Diệm's presidency, Civic Action was intended to transform Vietnam into a thriving, modern, independent, noncommunist Southeast Asian nation. Geoffrey Stewart juxtaposes Diem's revolutionary plan with the conflicting and competing visions of Vietnam's postcolonial future held by other indigenous groups. He shows how the government failed to gain legitimacy within the peasantry, ceding the advantage to the communist-led opposition and paving the way for the American military intervention in the mid-1960s. This book provides a richer and more nuanced analysis of the origins of the Vietnam War in which internal struggles over national identity, self-determination, and even modernity itself are central.
2017, First edition. A fine, as new copy in a fine d/w which is now in a protective cover.
Product Information
General Fields
- :
- : Cambridge University Press
- : Cambridge University Press
- : 0.521631
- : 01 March 2017
- : 2.1 Centimeters X 16 Centimeters X 23.6 Centimeters
- : books
Special Fields
- : 278
- : 959.7042
- : English
- : Hardback
- : Geoffrey C. Stewart