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Essential Trade - Vietnamese Women in a Changing Marketplace (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,651
Discovery Miles 16 510
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Essential Trade - Vietnamese Women in a Changing Marketplace (Hardcover)
Series: Southeast Asia: Politics, Meaning, and Memory
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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"My husband doesn't have a head for business," complained Ngoc, the
owner of a children's clothing stall in Ben Thanh market.
"Naturally, it's because he's a man." When the women who sell in Ho
Chi Minh City's iconic marketplace speak, their language suggests
that activity in the market is shaped by timeless, essential
truths: Vietnamese women are naturally adept at buying and selling,
while men are not; Vietnamese prefer to do business with family
members or through social contacts; stallholders are by nature
superstitious; marketplace trading is by definition a small-scale
enterprise. Essential Trade looks through the facade of these
"timeless truths" and finds active participants in a political
economy of appearances: traders' words and actions conform to
stereotypes of themselves as poor, weak women in order to clinch
sales, manage creditors, and protect themselves from accusations of
being greedy, corrupt, or "bourgeois" - even as they quietly slip
into southern Vietnam's growing middle class. But Leshkowich argues
that we should not dismiss the traders' self-disparaging words
simply because of their essentialist logic. In B?n Thanh market,
performing certain styles of femininity, kinship relations, social
networks, spirituality, and class allowed traders to portray
themselves as particular kinds of people who had the capacity to
act in volatile political and economic circumstances. When so much
seems to be changing, a claim that certain things or people are
inherently or naturally a particular way can be both personally
meaningful and strategically advantageous. Based on ethnographic
fieldwork and life history interviewing conducted over nearly two
decades, Essential Trade explores how women cloth and clothing
traders like Ng?c have plied their wares through four decades of
political and economic transformation: civil war, post-war economic
restructuring, socialist cooperativization, and the frenetic
competition of market socialism. With close attention to daily
activities and life narratives, this ground-breaking work of
critical feminist economic anthropology combines theoretical
insight, vivid ethnography, and moving personal stories to
illuminate how the interaction between gender and class has shaped
people's lives and created market socialist political economy. It
provides a compelling account of post-war southern Vietnam as seen
through the eyes of the dynamic women who have navigated forty
years of profound change while building their businesses in the
stalls of Ben Thanh market.
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