Tours of Vietnam

Tours of Vietnam

War, Travel Guides, and Memory

  • Auteur: Laderman, Scott; Rosenberg, Emily S.
  • Éditeur: Duke University Press
  • Collection: American Encounters/Global Interactions
  • ISBN: 9780822343967
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822392354
  • Lieu de publication:  Durham , United States
  • Année de publication électronique: 2009
  • Mois : Janvier
  • Pages: 312
  • Langue: Anglais
In Tours of Vietnam, Scott Laderman demonstrates how tourist literature has shaped Americans’ understanding of Vietnam and projections of United States power since the mid-twentieth century. Laderman analyzes portrayals of Vietnam’s land, history, culture, economy, and people in travel narratives, U.S. military guides, and tourist guidebooks, pamphlets, and brochures. Whether implying that Vietnamese women were in need of saving by “manly” American military power or celebrating the neoliberal reforms Vietnam implemented in the 1980s, ostensibly neutral guides have repeatedly represented events, particularly those related to the Vietnam War, in ways that favor the global ambitions of the United States.

Tracing a history of ideological assertions embedded in travel discourse, Laderman analyzes the use of tourism in the Republic of Vietnam as a form of Cold War cultural diplomacy by a fledgling state that, according to one pamphlet published by the Vietnamese tourism authorities, was joining the “family of free nations.” He chronicles the evolution of the Defense Department pocket guides to Vietnam, the first of which, published in 1963, promoted military service in Southeast Asia by touting the exciting opportunities offered by Vietnam to sightsee, swim, hunt, and water-ski. Laderman points out that, despite historians’ ongoing and well-documented uncertainty about the facts of the 1968 “Hue Massacre” during the National Liberation Front’s occupation of the former imperial capital, the incident often appears in English-language guidebooks as a settled narrative of revolutionary Vietnamese atrocity. And turning to the War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City, he notes that, while most contemporary accounts concede that the United States perpetrated gruesome acts of violence in Vietnam, many tourists and travel writers still dismiss the museum’s display of that record as little more than “propaganda.”

  • CONTENTS
  • PREFATORY NOTE The Nomenclature of the Vietnam War
  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  • ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
  • INTRODUCTION History, Tourism, and the Question of Empire
  • 1. Tourism and State Legitimacy in the Republic of Vietnam
  • 2. Educating Private Ryan: Tourism and the United States Military in Postcolonial Vietnam
  • 3. ‘‘They Set About Revenging Themselves on the Population’’: The ‘‘Hue Massacre’’ and the Shaping of Historical Consciousness
  • 4. The New Modernizers: Naturalizing Capitalism in Doi Moi Vietnam
  • 5. ‘‘The Other Side of the War’’: Memory and Meaning at the War Remnants Museum
  • EPILOGUE Tourism and the Martial Fascination
  • NOTES
  • REFERENCES
  • INDEX

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