Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945–1946)University of California Press, 15 thg 4, 2013 - 748 trang Amidst the revolutionary euphoria of August 1945, most Vietnamese believed that colonialism and war were being left behind in favor of independence and modernization. The late-September British-French coup de force in Saigon cast a pall over such assumptions. Ho Chi Minh tried to negotiate a mutually advantageous relationship with France, but meanwhile told his lieutenants to plan for a war in which the nascent state might have to survive without allies. In this landmark study, David Marr evokes the uncertainty and contingency as well as coherence and momentum of fast-paced events. Mining recently accessible sources in Aix-en-Provence and Hanoi, Marr explains what became the largest, most intense mobilization of human resources ever seen in Vietnam. |
Từ bên trong sách
Kết quả 1-5 trong 76
Trang xiv
... Viét Minh, continued to extol Allied victories and denounce the “dwarfbandits” (giqic hm), but mostly avoided confrontation in favor of popular proselytizing and preparations for eventual revolt. In some localities peasants raided rice ...
... Viét Minh, continued to extol Allied victories and denounce the “dwarfbandits” (giqic hm), but mostly avoided confrontation in favor of popular proselytizing and preparations for eventual revolt. In some localities peasants raided rice ...
Trang xvi
... Viét Minh, or the resistance. Yet many of the state institutions created in the late 1940s remain intact in Vietnam today, as do popular beliefs in modernity, efliciencies of scale, and centralization of power. Iust below the surface ...
... Viét Minh, or the resistance. Yet many of the state institutions created in the late 1940s remain intact in Vietnam today, as do popular beliefs in modernity, efliciencies of scale, and centralization of power. Iust below the surface ...
Trang 6
... Viét Minh groups for food, shelter, and clothing Proud of having a central Vietnamese government—and anxious not to be accused of obstructionism or worse—local committees tried to understand and apply most of the edicts coming from ...
... Viét Minh groups for food, shelter, and clothing Proud of having a central Vietnamese government—and anxious not to be accused of obstructionism or worse—local committees tried to understand and apply most of the edicts coming from ...
Trang 22
... Viét Minh papers told citizens to act only on orders from the government. One editorial claimed that “the Vietnamese people (drin toe) know how to respect discipline, how to obey orders from higher authority”.6 Only two weeks prior the ...
... Viét Minh papers told citizens to act only on orders from the government. One editorial claimed that “the Vietnamese people (drin toe) know how to respect discipline, how to obey orders from higher authority”.6 Only two weeks prior the ...
Trang 26
... Viét Minh than non-Viét Minh members, while for others it was the reverse. Several committee chairmen added that non-Viét Minh members were assigned less sensitive jobs like justice or social welfare. At one point in the discussion ...
... Viét Minh than non-Viét Minh members, while for others it was the reverse. Several committee chairmen added that non-Viét Minh members were assigned less sensitive jobs like justice or social welfare. At one point in the discussion ...
Nội dung
1 | |
19 | |
2 The Government at Work | 57 |
3 Defense | 111 |
4 Peace or War? | 183 |
5 Seeking Foreign Friends | 258 |
6 Material Dreams and Realities | 315 |
7 Dealing with Domestic Opposition | 383 |
8 The Indochinese Communist Party and the Việt Minh | 442 |
9 Mass Mobilization | 499 |
Epilogue | 569 |
Notes | 579 |
Sources | 689 |
Index | 701 |
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
Army August August Revolution Bac Giang Bac Ninh Bao Dai Binh Bureau C6ng Catholic central Chién Chinese citizens Cochinchina colonial Cu’u d’Argenlieu D6ng Dalat delegation Dinh dossier DRV government Du’c Du’o’ng fighting file first five flag France Franco-Vietnamese French H6 Chi Minh Haiphong Hanoi Hoang Hoang Xuan Han Hu’ng Ianuary Iapanese ICP members Indochina Iuly Khang Kinh Kinh t6 late leaders March military militia Minh groups minister National Assembly National Guard Nationalist Party newspaper Nguyén Nha Trang Ninh Northern Region October Oflice oflicials overseas Chinese Paris people’s committee Pham Phong piastres political President H6 province committees Qu6c Quan Quéc Region Committee Revolutionary League rice Saigon Sainteny Sept September So’n soldiers specific Thai Thanh Tién tion Tran troops Tru’o’ng Chinh Trung UBHCBB UBNDBB units V6 Nguyen Giap Vi6t Vi6t Minh Viét Viét Minh Vietnam Vietnamese Vinh Xuan