Journal of Vietnamese Studies
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jvietnamstudies.bsky.social
Journal of Vietnamese Studies
@jvietnamstudies.bsky.social
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The Journal of Vietnamese Studies publishes original social science and humanities research on Vietnamese history, politics, culture, and society. A @ucpress.bsky.social journal.
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Introducing JVS 20(2), “Rupture and Reunion: New Translations About the End of the War in Vietnam.” The issue—commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of April 30, 1975—is guest-edited by historian Nu-Anh Tran and comparative literature scholar Trinh M. Luu.

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Gerard will be remembered as an inspirational teacher, a wonderful scholar and a true friend to many people in Vietnamese Studies and beyond.

Photo: Christopher Goscha (Université du Québec à Montréal), Charles Keith (Michigan State U), and Gerard Sasges.
As the long-term Vietnam Director of the University of California Education Abroad Program based in Hanoi (2002-2007 and again from 2008-2011), Gerard provided an academically rigorous and culturally immersive Vietnamese experience to scores of American undergraduate students.
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Gerard also completed a series of innovative shorter studies on modern Vietnamese economic history, a hugely important but long-neglected subtopic (e.g. “Scaling the Commanding Heights: The Colonial Conglomerates and the Changing Political Economy of French Indochina,” Modern Asian Studies 45.5).
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He also supervised and edited a groundbreaking collection of oral histories about the nature of work in Vietnam: It’s a Living: Work and Life in Vietnam Today (NUS Press: 2013).
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...on the field of Vietnamese history through his superb first monograph: Imperial Intoxication: Alcohol and the Making of Colonial Indochina (University of Hawaii Press: 2017).
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JVS mourns the premature passing of Gerard Sasges, a brilliant scholar of Vietnam and an Associate Professor in the Dept of Southeast Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore.
A Canadian national with a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley, Gerard made a significant mark...
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JVS Editor-in-Chief Van Nguyen-Marshall’s book “Between War and the State: Civil Society in South Vietnam, 1954-1975” is the subject of a new Robert Jervis International Security Studies Forum at H-Diplo.
The forum is introduced by Peter Zinoman—another JVS EIC.

issforum.org/roundtables/...
H-Diplo | RJISSF Roundtable 16-38 on Nguyen-Marshall, Between War and the State
H-Diplo | Robert Jervis International Security Studies Forum 12 May 2025| PDF: https://issforum.org/to/jrt16-38 | Website: rjissf.org | X: @HDiplo Editor: Diane Labrosse Commissioning Editors: Thomas…
issforum.org
And in 2006—at the journal’s founding—JVS (vol. 1, no. 1-2) also featured a debate between Keith Taylor and Robert Buzzacano about the war.
See Edward Miller’s “War Stories: The Taylor-Buzzanco Debate and How We Think about the Vietnam War.”
“The Role of Weapons in the Second Indochina War: Republic of Vietnam Perspectives and Perceptions” by Martin Loicano (2013, vol. 8, no. 2).
Historian Sean Fear’s essay “The Ambiguous Legacy of Ngô Đình Diệm in South Vietnam’s Second Republic (1967–1975” (2016, vol. 11, no. 1).
JVS has also published many stand-alone research articles on the conflict. They include:

Historian Nu-Anh Tran’s “Will the Real Caravelle Manifesto Please Stand Up?: A Critique and a New Translation“ (2023, vol. 18, no. 3).
JVS has also published pioneering research on the conflict in our pages over the past two decades.
In 2009, JVS published a special issue on the Vietnam War (vol. 4, no. 3).
The issue includes thirteen new translations of works by Vietnamese authors of all political backgrounds responding to the war and its end. It also includes a photo essay by photographer Stephen Black and his images taken from multiple regions of Vietnam in 1978.
The Journal of Vietnamese Studies announces a new special issue to mark the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, guest-edited by historian Nu-Anh Tran and comparative literature scholar Trinh M. Luu.
The issue also features original reviews of five new books.

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In the Multimedia Reviews section, a photo essay by educator and photographer Stephen Black provides a glimpse into everyday life in postwar Vietnam circa 1978. Seen through the lens of a Western visitor, the images provide unique insight into an understudied period.

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Although each translated work offers a unique perspective, as a collective they touch on shared themes of reunification in and after 1975—troubled reunion and separation, migration, coerced reeducation, and artistic and cultural reform.

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JVS gratefully acknowledges the support of USIP for the translations in this issue. We also thank the thirteen translators who helped produce them, as well as the original copyright holders who generously allowed us to present their works in this form.

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In a preface, Andrew Wells-Dang—Senior Expert on SEA at the US Institute of Peace—writes “This special issue is a call to deepen our understanding and commitment to the persistent tasks of acknowledging the past, strengthening human relationships, and envisioning the future.”

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“Together, these translations depict the coming of peace as an experience that was simultaneously collective and partisan.”

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“At the same time, the pieces emphasize shared sentiments and experiences, such as the yearning for peace and reunion, the pain of separation from loved ones, the ache of homesickness and dislocation, and the difficulty of overcoming differences. (...)”

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In their Introduction, guest editors Luu and Tran write
“The accounts reflect a wide range of political perspectives, from ardent anti-communism to committed communism, and highlight the enduring partisan differences that divided many Vietnamese long after the war. (…)”

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This special issue collects thirteen original translations of works on the Vietnam War’s end and its aftermath. Songs, poems, memoirs, and fiction give voice to Vietnamese on all sides – winners and losers; soldiers and civilians; those who stayed and those who left.

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Introducing JVS 20(2), “Rupture and Reunion: New Translations About the End of the War in Vietnam.” The issue—commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of April 30, 1975—is guest-edited by historian Nu-Anh Tran and comparative literature scholar Trinh M. Luu.

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