The Vietnamese-American 1.5 Generation is divided into two parts. Part I offers an overview of Vietnamese history, focusing on Vietnam under French colonial rule, the First Indochina War, American involvement in Vietnam, the Fall of Saigon and its aftermath, and refugee exoduses. Part Il comprises narratives written by Vietnamese-American students enrolled at the University of California system
Since the fall of Saigon in 1975, over three-quarters of a million Indochinese refugees have come to...
The formation of a unique identity, the obstacles to retaining culture in a new country, and the Ame...
A review of letters submitted by African American Vietnam veterans featured in Sepia, a monthly maga...
In this book review of Body Counts: The Vietnam War and Militarized Refugees, the author reviews the...
This discussion of Vietnam and its people is limited to four major aspects: the communist policy of ...
One tragedy of war is a people uprooted-tom from their land, history, and culture to seek a haven in...
Book review by Mark Pfeifer: Nguyen, N. H. C. (2016). South Vietnamese Soldiers: Memories of the Vie...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
Twenty-five years after the fall of Saigon, it seems doubtful that historians will ever achieve cons...
In this first comprehensive study of Vietnamese American place-making and community-building, Karin ...
In the years following the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, one and a half million refugees and immig...
This review discusses the experiences of Vietnamese in the region. This group that became prominent ...
A review of Bloods: An Oral History of the Vietnam War by Black Veterans, by Wallace Terry (1984)
The fall of South Vietnam in 1975 has forever changed the lives of many Vietnamese people and re-sul...
This scientific anthology about the past and present of Vietnamese immigration in East Germany and W...
Since the fall of Saigon in 1975, over three-quarters of a million Indochinese refugees have come to...
The formation of a unique identity, the obstacles to retaining culture in a new country, and the Ame...
A review of letters submitted by African American Vietnam veterans featured in Sepia, a monthly maga...
In this book review of Body Counts: The Vietnam War and Militarized Refugees, the author reviews the...
This discussion of Vietnam and its people is limited to four major aspects: the communist policy of ...
One tragedy of war is a people uprooted-tom from their land, history, and culture to seek a haven in...
Book review by Mark Pfeifer: Nguyen, N. H. C. (2016). South Vietnamese Soldiers: Memories of the Vie...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
Twenty-five years after the fall of Saigon, it seems doubtful that historians will ever achieve cons...
In this first comprehensive study of Vietnamese American place-making and community-building, Karin ...
In the years following the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, one and a half million refugees and immig...
This review discusses the experiences of Vietnamese in the region. This group that became prominent ...
A review of Bloods: An Oral History of the Vietnam War by Black Veterans, by Wallace Terry (1984)
The fall of South Vietnam in 1975 has forever changed the lives of many Vietnamese people and re-sul...
This scientific anthology about the past and present of Vietnamese immigration in East Germany and W...
Since the fall of Saigon in 1975, over three-quarters of a million Indochinese refugees have come to...
The formation of a unique identity, the obstacles to retaining culture in a new country, and the Ame...
A review of letters submitted by African American Vietnam veterans featured in Sepia, a monthly maga...