Books > History > World history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
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Vietnam 1945 - The Quest for Power (Paperback, Revised)
Loot Price: R1,375
Discovery Miles 13 750
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Vietnam 1945 - The Quest for Power (Paperback, Revised)
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A winning combination of scholarly tome and readable history,
examining the portentous events culminating in the "August
Revolution" of 1945, when Ho Chi Minh declared the independent
Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Marr (Vietnamese Tradition on
Trial, 1920-1945, not reviewed, etc.) learned the Vietnamese
language as a US Marine Corps intelligence officer in 1961. He went
to Vietnam the next year, then studied its history and society at
graduate school in the United States before becoming a senior
fellow at the Australian National University's Research School of
Pacific Studies. He has scrutinized an astounding number of
official documents in Vietnam, France, and the US and has
interviewed many of the important players in Vietnam's post-WW II
history. All that work reaches fruition in this book, which tells
the historically important story of the end of Japanese occupation
of Vietnam and the short-lived takeover of the country by Ho Chi
Minh's revolutionary Viet Minh in August 1945. Mart successfully
navigates his way through the dense web of competing and
contentious factions in postwar Vietnam: the occupying Japanese
army; the defeated French civilians and colonial bureaucrats; the
weak Vietnamese government of Emperor Bao Dai; the
communist-dominated Viet Mirth; the disparate group of
anticommunist Vietnamese nationalists; the nationalist Chinese; the
British army; the handful of American OSS agents on the scene to
help fight the Japanese; and the various French officials working
under orders from General Charles de Gaulle to recolonize Vietnam
(and Laos and Cambodia) as soon as possible. Marx tells this
extremely complicated story very well, backing up his sharp
analysis with mountains of supporting factual evidence. He portrays
Ho Chi Minh as a fervently anticolonial nationalist who looked in
vain for help from the US based on vague American promises to work
against French recolonization. Meticulous and objective, an
indispensable document for understanding the roots of American
involvement in Vietnam. (Kirkus Reviews)
The year 1945 was the most significant in the modern history of
Vietnam. One thousand years of dynastic politics and monarchist
ideology came to an end. Eight decades of French rule lay shattered
and five years of Japanese occupation ceased. Drawing on extensive
archival research, interviews and an examination of published
memoirs and documents, David G. Marr has written a detailed and
descriptive analysis of this crucial moment in Vietnamese history,
and shows how Vietnam became a vortex of intense international and
domestic competition for power.
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