In this book review of Body Counts: The Vietnam War and Militarized Refugees, the author reviews the concept of “militarized refugee,” explores “memory” as a research framework, and attempts to connect the author’s memory to the memory of the author of the book. The paper is inspired by her own curiosity about the lives of her father and uncles who were directly involved in the Vietnam War, as well as her experience with the lack of relevancy in the history curriculum throughout her K-12 education
This article explores the writings of two Vietnamese-American writers, former refugees: Viet Nguyen ...
This dissertation offers an ethnographic study of the relationships between Vietnamese H.O. emigrant...
In the United States, the writing on the Vietnam War involves the highly organized and strategic for...
In this book review of Body Counts: The Vietnam War and Militarized Refugees, the author reviews the...
This article considers how recent narratives about Vietnamese refugees engage with the Vietnam War’s...
Despite the official conclusion of the Vietnam War, the struggle for remembrance and recollection en...
A book with a story, history and emotion that encompasses the story of multiple United States milita...
More than forty years after the last U.S. combat troops departed Vietnam in 1973, the conflict looms...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
Nothing ever dies. Not the memories of war, not its trauma, not its controversies--and not the hope...
Book review by Mark Pfeifer: Nguyen, N. H. C. (2016). South Vietnamese Soldiers: Memories of the Vie...
The Vietnamese-American 1.5 Generation is divided into two parts. Part I offers an overview of Vietn...
Review of: Wisconsin Vietnam War Stories: Our Veterans Remember, by Sarah A. Larsen and Jennifer M...
I am not 100% “objective” as a reviewer since I am Vietnamese and know many people profiled in the b...
The Vietnam War’s influence on politics, foreign policy, and subsequent military campaigns is the ce...
This article explores the writings of two Vietnamese-American writers, former refugees: Viet Nguyen ...
This dissertation offers an ethnographic study of the relationships between Vietnamese H.O. emigrant...
In the United States, the writing on the Vietnam War involves the highly organized and strategic for...
In this book review of Body Counts: The Vietnam War and Militarized Refugees, the author reviews the...
This article considers how recent narratives about Vietnamese refugees engage with the Vietnam War’s...
Despite the official conclusion of the Vietnam War, the struggle for remembrance and recollection en...
A book with a story, history and emotion that encompasses the story of multiple United States milita...
More than forty years after the last U.S. combat troops departed Vietnam in 1973, the conflict looms...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
Nothing ever dies. Not the memories of war, not its trauma, not its controversies--and not the hope...
Book review by Mark Pfeifer: Nguyen, N. H. C. (2016). South Vietnamese Soldiers: Memories of the Vie...
The Vietnamese-American 1.5 Generation is divided into two parts. Part I offers an overview of Vietn...
Review of: Wisconsin Vietnam War Stories: Our Veterans Remember, by Sarah A. Larsen and Jennifer M...
I am not 100% “objective” as a reviewer since I am Vietnamese and know many people profiled in the b...
The Vietnam War’s influence on politics, foreign policy, and subsequent military campaigns is the ce...
This article explores the writings of two Vietnamese-American writers, former refugees: Viet Nguyen ...
This dissertation offers an ethnographic study of the relationships between Vietnamese H.O. emigrant...
In the United States, the writing on the Vietnam War involves the highly organized and strategic for...