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Social Science and Public Policy

Rethinking War and Revolution in Vietnam

February 17, 2022 at 12:00pm1:30pm EST

Virtual (See event details)

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Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs

Center for European Studies

presents

Rethinking War and Revolution in Vietnam 

Many myths about Vietnam and the Vietnam War that were created during the war are still widely taught in the US today. This talk presents findings based on fresh sources from Vietnam that force us to rethink the orthodox view of that event concerning the nature of the conflict from the perspective of Vietnamese revolutionaries.

Tuong Vu
Professor & Department Head
Department of Political Science
University of Oregon

Tuong Vu is Professor and Department Head of the Political Science Department at the University of Oregon and has held visiting appointments at Princeton University and National University of Singapore. His research has focused on the comparative politics of state formation, revolutions, nationalism, and communism in East and Southeast Asia, and more recently, on Vietnam’s modern history and politics. He is the author or co-editor of seven books and 30 journal articles and book chapters. Among his recent and forthcoming publications are “Bringing Empire Back in: The Imperial Origins of Nations in Indochina,” in Aviel Roshwald, Cathie Carmichael, and Matthew D’Auria, eds. Cambridge History of Nationhood and Nationalism (Cambridge, forthcoming); The Republic of Vietnam, 1955-1975: Vietnamese Perspectives on Nation-Building (Cornell, 2020); and Vietnam’s Communist Revolution: The Power and Limits of Ideology (Cambridge, 2017). He currently directs the US-Vietnam Research Center at the University of Oregon to promote research and education on contemporary Vietnam, US-Vietnam relations, and the Vietnamese American community.

Register here 

For more information or to request accessibility arrangements, please contact Havva Karakas-Keles, hkarakas@syr.edu.

This event was published on January 31, 2022.


Event Details