War Material: Vietnam and Transpacific Imaginaries of Capital and Transition argues that the slaughtered Vietnamese body and Vietnam more generally – both as material substance and fantasy-driven imaginary – were conscripted to inflate, deflate, and consolidate the making of permanent war as global structure and the permanent war subject as its capture. I observe how Vietnamese slaughter as signifier, because of its idiosyncratic location within the auto-recuperative mythology of U.S. empire, has been used as the material and ideological infrastructures of U.S. asymmetrical warfare domestically and abroad from the Cold War to the present – what I refer to as war material. By thinking the Vietnamese body as war material, this dissertation al...
<p>In his Dispatches, Michael Herr quotes the gonzo photojournalist Tim Page: "Take the glamour out ...
In dialogue with new critical scholarship on immigration, refugee, war, and memory studies as well a...
In this article I argue that a rereading of “The Vietnam Project” allows us to explore the varied fu...
This project examines the politics of knowledge production in Vietnam during the transition from soc...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon announced the "Vietnamization" of the Vietnam War, a handover of re...
My thesis is particularly interested in how French colonialism is selectively forgotten while the Co...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
UnrestrictedThe aftermath of the Vietnam War/American War (post-1975) not only resulted in the large...
“War Dialling: Image Transmissions from Saigon.” Mythologizing the Vietnam War: Visual Culture and M...
When the Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, the Republic of Vietnam—the state south of the sevente...
This paper examines discourses of orientalism narrating the political and cultural significance of r...
This paper examines discourses of orientalism narrating the political and cultural significance of r...
When the Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, the Republic of Vietnam—the state south of the sevente...
The dissertation examines Vietnamese literary representations of what is known in the West as the Vi...
<p>In his Dispatches, Michael Herr quotes the gonzo photojournalist Tim Page: "Take the glamour out ...
In dialogue with new critical scholarship on immigration, refugee, war, and memory studies as well a...
In this article I argue that a rereading of “The Vietnam Project” allows us to explore the varied fu...
This project examines the politics of knowledge production in Vietnam during the transition from soc...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon announced the "Vietnamization" of the Vietnam War, a handover of re...
My thesis is particularly interested in how French colonialism is selectively forgotten while the Co...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
UnrestrictedThe aftermath of the Vietnam War/American War (post-1975) not only resulted in the large...
“War Dialling: Image Transmissions from Saigon.” Mythologizing the Vietnam War: Visual Culture and M...
When the Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, the Republic of Vietnam—the state south of the sevente...
This paper examines discourses of orientalism narrating the political and cultural significance of r...
This paper examines discourses of orientalism narrating the political and cultural significance of r...
When the Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, the Republic of Vietnam—the state south of the sevente...
The dissertation examines Vietnamese literary representations of what is known in the West as the Vi...
<p>In his Dispatches, Michael Herr quotes the gonzo photojournalist Tim Page: "Take the glamour out ...
In dialogue with new critical scholarship on immigration, refugee, war, and memory studies as well a...
In this article I argue that a rereading of “The Vietnam Project” allows us to explore the varied fu...