Ghosts of War in Vietnam

Exploring the cultural memory and spirits of the Vietnam War

Heonik Kwon author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:6th Mar '08

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Ghosts of War in Vietnam cover

This compelling book examines the Vietnamese memory of the Vietnam War through the lens of ghosts and their societal significance, as seen in Ghosts of War in Vietnam.

In Ghosts of War in Vietnam, Heonik Kwon provides an insightful exploration of the Vietnamese experience and collective memory surrounding the Vietnam War. The author delves into the cultural significance of spirits representing the war dead, highlighting their role in shaping postwar narratives and societal understanding of the conflict. Through vivid storytelling, Kwon examines how these ghosts are intertwined with the lives of the living, revealing a complex relationship that transcends mere memory and enters the realm of social justice.

The book presents a unique perspective by focusing on the rituals and beliefs associated with these wandering souls. Kwon discusses the intimate ties that persist in Vietnamese culture, illustrating how these unsettled identities continue to influence contemporary society. The narratives he shares serve not only to honor the memories of those lost but also to challenge readers to consider the broader implications of war on collective identity and historical consciousness.

By weaving together personal anecdotes and cultural analysis, Ghosts of War in Vietnam offers a compelling examination of how the past is remembered and reinterpreted through the lens of the supernatural. Kwon's work encourages readers to reflect on the importance of acknowledging these spectral figures in understanding the ongoing impact of the Vietnam War, both in Vietnam and in the global context of memory and conflict.

Review of the hardback: 'The voices of Americans lost, dead, maimed physically or psychologically, fill the bookshelves. For the most part the voices of Vietnamese, living or dead, are unavailable. In his powerfully moving and beautifully written book, The Ghosts of War in Vietnam, Heonik Kwon enables those voices to be heard. The ghosts of Vietnam's wars are not metaphorical but vital presences through which Vietnamese understand their recent history, reflect on all that has happened since and attempt to resolve the contradictions of the present. These are ghost stories that will haunt you. No other book I have read about contemporary Vietnam so thoroughly, painfully, and intelligently illuminates both the country's past and present. Ghost of War in Vietnam is an indispensable book.' Marilyn Young, New York University
Review of the hardback: 'Through a rich, supple and creative analysis of what the author persuasively argues is the omnipresence of ghosts and ghost stories in wartime and postwar Vietnam, Ghosts of War in Vietnam addresses the complexities of war and memory in Vietnam in ways that will undoubtedly have a transformative impact on the study of the American war in Vietnam, the relationship between decolonization and the Cold War and the nature of historical memory in the post Cold War era. It will without question become one of the indispensable works on war and memory in the modern era.' Mark Philip Bradley, Northwestern University
Review of the hardback: 'Heonik Kwon has written an outstanding book: Part history, part anthropology, part literary study, it opens up the study of the Vietnam War in a way that no other work of scholarship has done. By giving ghosts of many forms the place they deserve in the Vietnamese tragedy, Kwon tells us much that we need to know about the war, its aftermath, and about issues of death, displacement and commemoration in today's Vietnamese society.' O. A. Westad, Cold War Studies Centre, LSE
Review of the hardback: 'Taking a unique approach to the cultural history of war, the author introduces stories about spirits claiming social justice and about his own efforts to wrestle with the physical and spiritual presence of ghosts.' The Times Higher Education Supplement
Review of the hardback: 'This is a rare study that will open new avenues of inquiry in Vietnamese studies. Even more important, Kwon's methodology is groundbreaking in understanding not only the Vietnam War, but also war and society in the larger world community. Summing up: highly recommended. All levels/libraries.' Choice Reviews Online
Review of the hardback: '… unique and revealing …' New York Review of Books
Review of the hardback: 'Kwon's book transcends its origins as an academic anthropological study to paint a profoundly moving psychic portrait of a war-damaged country that may never be at peace.' The Scotsman
Review of the hardback: 'Heonik Kwon throws the reader with such compulsion into the lives of the wandering spirits of the wars in Vietnam that it is almost impossible to put this original, imaginative, and sensitive book down. … Ghosts of War in Vietnam is anthropology at its best. It will without doubt become a classic text of anthropology, and I hope one that is crucial to international relations, religious studies, sociological theory, political science, cold war studies, and conflict, war, and peace studies.' Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
'… richly detailed narratives… a strong and unique contribution to a growing body of anthropological and historical literature on war memory in late socialist Vietnam …' Journal of Asian Studies

ISBN: 9780521880619

Dimensions: 231mm x 157mm x 23mm

Weight: 510g

234 pages