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The First Vietnam War: Violence, Sovereignty, and the Fracture of the South, 1945–1956

The First Vietnam War: Violence, Sovereignty, and the Fracture of the South, 1945–1956

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Shawn F. McHale
Cambridge University Press, 8/26/2021
EAN 9781108837446, ISBN10: 1108837441

Hardcover, 350 pages, 23.5 x 15.9 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Shawn McHale explores why the communist-led resistance in Vietnam won the anticolonial war against France (1945–54), except in the south. He shows how broad swaths of Vietnamese people were uneasily united in 1945 under the Viet Minh Resistance banner, all opposing the French attempt to reclaim control of the country. By 1947, resistance unity had shattered and Khmer-Vietnamese ethnic violence had divided the Mekong delta. From this point on, the war in the south turned into an overt civil war wrapped up in a war against France. Based on extensive archival research in four countries and in three languages, this is the first substantive English-language book focused on southern Vietnam's transition from colonialism to independence.

Introduction
Sovereignty, Violence, and Institutional Collapse at the Edge of France's Empire
Part I. Fracture, 1945–1947
1. A Plural Mekong Delta under Stress
2. The Southern General Uprising
3. Priming Upheavals in the Mekong Delta
4. The Double Fracture of The Mekong Delta
Part II. Disassemblage/Reassemblage, 1947–1953
5. Empire, Racial Survival, and Race Hatred
6. Contesting State and Sovereignty
7. Forced Migrations and Suffering
8. French Pacification Meets the Vietnamese Resistance
9. Alternative Trajectories
Seeing Like Parastates, Militias, And Strongmen
Part III. Endgame, 1953–1956
10. The Twilight of Empire and the Strange Birth of South Vietnam.