Return to Vietnam
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10
086091643X
ISBN-13
9780860916437
Publisher
Verso Books
Imprint
Verso Books
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Nov 17th, 1994
Print length
192 Pages
Weight
328 grams
Dimensions
19.60 x 22.10 x 1.30 cms
Product Classification:
Photographs: collectionsTravel writing
Ksh 3,000.00
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The photographer Raymond Depardon and the writer Jean-Claude Guillebaud both covered the Vietnam War. After 20 years, they decided to go back. Travelling by slow train, Russian car and bicycle, they travelled from South to North. This book is an account of these travels.
The photographer and filmmaker Raymond Depardon and the writer Jean-Claude Guillebaud belong to a generation who grew up with the word 'Vietnam' on their lips. As journalists, both had covered the Vietnam War until 1972, after twenty long years - of Stalinism, boat people, Hollywood heroics and French nostalgia - they decided it was time to go back. Vietnam, they believed, was not a story which "you could simply stop watching and switch off." They traveled from South to North, from Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) to Hanoi, exploring memories of the war and the contradictions of peace, looking and listening with a sensitivity and sense of solidarity all too rare in travel writing. The result is an extraordinary account of a country transformed and of a people, victors and victims together, betrayed on all sides, coming back to life.<br><br>In Hanoi they find none of the grim austerity imagined by foreigners, but rather a city of beauty now 'opening' to capitalism partly thanks to the experiences and money orders of workers sent in their thousands to Poland of the GDR. At Khe Sanh, on the bloodiest battlefield of the war, children dig for shrapnel to sell for a cent a kilo; lovers stroll on the beach at De Nang, where the first US troops landed. Loudspeakers in the street still broadcast a litany of production figures, but they are drowned out by Paul Anka and the Everly Brothers. Saigon, the author discover, has easily triumphed over Stalin’s murderous economic planning. But it may face a tougher adversary in capitalism, whose grim 'post-communist' program can be found in a single neon sign: "Kenwood-HiFi-Stereo-Night-Club-Karaoke-VIP-Room-Discotheque-Saigon-Pub-Health-Centre-Coffee-Shop."<br><br>As rich in political perceptions as it is in memorable images, <i>Return to Vietnam</i> shatters the myths about a country which the West fought over, flattened and forgot.
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