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The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empire, Disease, and Modernity in French
Colonial Vietnam tells the darkly humorous story of the French
colonial state's failed efforts to impose its vision of modernity
upon the colonial city of Hanoi, Vietnam. Part of the Graphic
Histories series, this book offers a case study in the history of
imperialism, highlighting the racialized economic inequalities of
empire, colonization as a form of modernization, and industrial
capitalism's creation of a radical power differential between "the
West and the rest." On a deeper level, The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt
examines the contradictions unique to the French Third Republic's
colonial "civilizing mission," the development of Vietnamese
resistance to French rule, and the history of disease. Featuring
forty-nine primary sources-many available in English for the first
time-and three full-color maps, The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt
illustrates the ironic and tragic ways in which modernization
projects can have unintended consequences.
"The story of the legendary martial arts fighter and kickboxer Oum
Ry is by turns pulse-pounding, disturbing, and powerful. His is an
astonishing life told beautifully by his daughter Zochada Tat and
Addi Somekh. The book will grip you from its first pages and not
let you go." -Jeff Chang, author of Water Mirror Echo: Bruce Lee
and the Making of Asian America and Can't Stop Won't Stop: A
History of the Hip-Hop Generation Oum Ry (b.1944) is a former
international champion kickboxer who first brought the Cambodian
martial art Pradal Serey to the United States. When his family of
silver engravers couldn't afford his food or schooling, he lived
with monks until seeking out Pradal Serey masters, soon becoming
national champion at 23 years old and one of the most famous
fighters in the region. For 15 years, he toured Southeast Asia, and
without ever suffering a knock-out, won more than 250 fights. After
a young man's dream-life of stardom, parties, and girls, his new
wife gave birth to a child in 1975, two months before the Khmer
Rouge entered Phnom Penh and threw the country into the chaos of
civil war, where starvation, disease, and mass executions were
common. Oum Ry survived the genocide though much of his family
perished. He was saved many times from death in Cambodia due to
fame, talent, and his resilience, but suffered a life-threatening
attack during Southern California's epic gang violence of the
1990s. Earlier, as a refugee with his young family in Chicago, Oum
Ry learned English while working cleaning hotels. But within a few
years, he had an investor in Long Beach, California and opened one
of the first kickboxing gyms in the United States. This is Oum Ry's
life story, which is propelled by his highly anticipated return to
Cambodia in February 2022 to reunite with family and to pass on
Pradal Serey traditions to the next generation.
“The story of the legendary martial arts fighter and kickboxer
Oum Ry is by turns pulse-pounding, disturbing, and powerful. His is
an astonishing life told beautifully by his daughter Zochada Tat
and Addi Somekh. The book will grip you from its first pages and
not let you go." —Jeff Chang, author of Water Mirror Echo:
Bruce Lee and the Making of Asian
America  and Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History
of the Hip-Hop Generation Oum Ry (b.1944)Â is a former
international champion kickboxer who first brought the Cambodian
martial art Pradal Serey to the United States. When his family of
silver engravers couldn't afford his food or schooling, he lived
with monks until seeking out Pradal Serey masters, soon
becoming national champion at 23 years old and one of the most
famous fighters in the region. For 15 years, he toured Southeast
Asia, and without ever suffering a knock-out, won more than 250
fights. After a young man’s dream-life of stardom, parties,
and girls, his new wife gave birth to a child in 1975, two months
before the Khmer Rouge entered Phnom Penh and threw the country
into the chaos of civil war, where starvation, disease, and mass
executions were common. Oum Ry survived the genocide though much of
his family perished. He was saved many times from death in Cambodia
due to fame, talent, and his resilience, but suffered a
life-threatening attack during Southern California’s epic gang
violence of the 1990s. Earlier, as a refugee with his young family
in Chicago, Oum Ry learned English while working cleaning hotels.
But within a few years, he had an investor in Long Beach,
California and opened one of the first kickboxing gyms in the
United States. This is Oum Ry's life story, which is propelled by
his highly anticipated return to Cambodia in February 2022 to
reunite with family and to pass on Pradal Serey traditions to the
next generation.
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