Intellectual developments since the mid-1960s have served to assist the efforts of those responsible for American policy in the Vietnam war subsequently to empty the history of that conflict of ethical critique. This article argues for the necessity of ethically informed historical enquiry and, with respect to Vietnam, proposes that there now exists the best opportunity for a generation for scholars to construct a fresh and credible moral history of the war. Increasingly, we have access to the perspectives of the ‘other side/s’: the revolution in the south, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam regime in Hanoi, the People's Republic of China, and the USSR. An examination of the motivations and interactions of these parties, combined with the c...
This study examines resistance to the Vietnam War as an arena for moral experience. It presents port...
Vietnam War is thought to be the best-known military conflict after the World War II. This is becau...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
Although the Vietnam Conflict was not conducted in an entirely ethical manner, the war provided a ta...
The war in Vietnam achieved almost none of the goals the American decision-makers formulated, and it...
Few chapters in American history have been filled with more importance and had more impact upon this...
Due to the failure of western scholars to exploit records and studies in the Vietnamese language, th...
In this article, Anderson explores the reasons that make the resolution of key historical questions ...
The Vietnam conflict was a brutal war fought between the United States helping the south Vietnamese ...
The odd-and possibly most instructive-thing about the Vietnam war is that while all the physical rui...
Critics of the American commitment to defend the Republic of South Vietnam argue that the United Sta...
This study explores how ordinary Americans could be made to fight a brutal and immoral war, and expl...
The article examines the formulation of the PTSD diagnosis in relation to the history of political a...
In the middle of the 20th century young American men gave their lives in the jungles of Vietnam for ...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
This study examines resistance to the Vietnam War as an arena for moral experience. It presents port...
Vietnam War is thought to be the best-known military conflict after the World War II. This is becau...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
Although the Vietnam Conflict was not conducted in an entirely ethical manner, the war provided a ta...
The war in Vietnam achieved almost none of the goals the American decision-makers formulated, and it...
Few chapters in American history have been filled with more importance and had more impact upon this...
Due to the failure of western scholars to exploit records and studies in the Vietnamese language, th...
In this article, Anderson explores the reasons that make the resolution of key historical questions ...
The Vietnam conflict was a brutal war fought between the United States helping the south Vietnamese ...
The odd-and possibly most instructive-thing about the Vietnam war is that while all the physical rui...
Critics of the American commitment to defend the Republic of South Vietnam argue that the United Sta...
This study explores how ordinary Americans could be made to fight a brutal and immoral war, and expl...
The article examines the formulation of the PTSD diagnosis in relation to the history of political a...
In the middle of the 20th century young American men gave their lives in the jungles of Vietnam for ...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
This study examines resistance to the Vietnam War as an arena for moral experience. It presents port...
Vietnam War is thought to be the best-known military conflict after the World War II. This is becau...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...