Phi-Van Nguyen has written a much-needed book focused on the flight of people from North Vietnam (Democratic Republic of Vietnam) to South Vietnam (Republic of Vietnam RVN) after the Geneva Accords of 1954, which created two separate states.According to the author, "This book explains why people who evacuated from the north in 1954 became the most anticommunist group in the RVN" (p.177).A Displaced Nation consists of eight chapters, beginning with a discussion of the status of North and South Vietnam, "two states for one country" (p.15), after the Geneva Accords and ending with "one Vietnam across borders" in the 1990s (p.172).It argues that "population dis placement, when used as a weapon to reinforce or undermine the legitimacy of contesting polit ical attitudes, affects the projection of the nation state" (p. 6).The book is interested primarily in the Catholics among the evacuees and tends to view them as mostly motivated by religion, yet with many of them inspired to assume a prominent symbolic identity in the politics of the Cold War, an anti-Communist identity that was diverse and changed over time.A strength of this book is its emphasis on the "civil war" aspect of the French and Ameri can phases of the Vietnam wars that is missing in most writing about modern Vietnam.The author argues with well-documented assertions that, despite the involvement of the major Cold War powers, the struggle between the Vietnamese Communists and their Vietnamese oppo nents was fundamentally a Vietnamese affair.This is important because most writing about the wars in Vietnam focuses nearly exclusively upon the United States and other foreign states and upon only one of the Vietnamese contenders, the one based in Hanoi.Thus, this book adds to the increasing awareness among scholars of Vietnamese who did not want to live in a Commu nist state and who supported the cause of resisting Hanoi-led war.
Olga Dror (Thu,) studied this question.