The Locator -- [(subject = "Vietnam--Politics and government")]

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Author:
Stur, Heather Marie, 1975- author.
Title:
Saigon at war : South Vietnam and the global sixties / Heather Marie Stur, University of Southern Mississippi.
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
xiv, 280 pages ; 23 cm.
Subject:
Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)--History--20th century.
Vietnam--Politics and government--1945-1975.
Vietnam (Republic)--Politics and government.
Postcolonialism--Vietnam (Republic)--History--20th century.
Politics and government.
Postcolonialism.
Vietnam.
Vietnam--Ho Chi Minh City.
Vietnam (Republic)
Postcolonialism--Vietnam (Republic)--History--20th century.
Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)--History--20th century.
Vietnam--Politics and government--1945-1975.
Vietnam (Republic)--Politics and government.
1900-1999
History.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
The Heart of South Vietnam: Saigon in the Sixties -- A Tradition of Activism -- South Vietnam's Sixties Youth -- South Vietnam and the World -- Building Connections Between the People and the Government -- Saigon After Tet -- The Catholic Opposition and Political Repression -- Saigon in the Seventies.
Summary:
"It was a tense week in Saigon in October 1974, when a South Vietnamese university student slipped into the office of the city's archbishop to deliver a letter addressed to North Vietnamese youth. Archbishop Nguyen Van Binh was headed to the Vatican for an international meeting of Catholic leaders, and he promised the student he would hand the letter off to his Hanoi counterpart when he saw him at the conference. The letter implored North Vietnamese students to join southern youth in demanding an end to the fighting that the 1973 Paris Peace Agreement was supposed to have halted. Both the archbishop and the student risked arrest for circulating the letter. Authorities had raided the offices and shut down the operations of four newspapers that had published it. That the leader of South Vietnam's Catholics would be involved in clandestine communication between North and South Vietnamese students would have been surprising in the early 1960s, but by the mid-Seventies, many Vietnamese Catholics had grown weary enough of the war that they saw peace and reconciliation, even if under Hanoi's control, as the better alternative to endless violence."-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Cambridge studies in US foreign relations
ISBN:
1316614115
9781316614112
1107161924
9781107161924
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1141019086
LCCN:
2019056226
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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