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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Eugene S. Hunn , E. Thomas Morning Owl , Phillip E. Cash Cash , Jennifer Karson EngumPublisher: University of Washington Press Imprint: University of Washington Press Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 30.50cm Weight: 0.953kg ISBN: 9780295990262ISBN 10: 0295990260 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 01 December 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"Quagmire is also an example of the challenges faced when trying to translate ambitions in historical narrative. How to tell a story of such complexity and nuance? . . . I expect [the answer] will come pretty close to the way Biggs has written his story. --Maurits Ertsen ""Technology and Culture"" Quagmire offers a neat and fresh storyline, explaining that nation-builders failed to understand the serpentine watercourses and landscapes of the Mekong Delta. . . . Biggs shines a light on the everyday struggles of famers and migrants. . . --Geoffrey Cain ""Asian Affairs"" (1/1/2012 12:00:00 AM) [A] much-needed perspective on human efforts over time to shape this amphibious land/waterscape. . . . Biggs is clearly a major talent, who has written a path-breaking book that enables us to see, experience, and interpret the delta anew. --Peter A. Coclanis ""Journal of Contemporary Asia"" Biggs has authored an exciting work that clearly breaks new ground. I have little doubt that the book will be well received by multiple audiences. --Shawn McHale ""Asian Studies Review"" Biggs's command of the sources, both Vietnamese and Western, is impressive, and his book will interest historians of the Vietnam War as background information. Otherwise, it is an important contribution to Vietnam history and geography. Summing up: Highly recommended. -- ""Choice"" (1/1/2011 12:00:00 AM) Blending disciplinary perspectives from history, anthropology, and geography, Biggs approaches the Mekong Delta as a landscape--as things on the land, as people, institutions, discourses, artifacts, metaphors, and eco-logics--with a particularly unstable morphology. --Michael Kantor ""H-HISTGEOG"" (1/1/2013 12:00:00 AM) I learned that it is not a linear development how people use the environment or how the environment affects people; rather it is a dynamic equilibrium between humans and environment, and it is that interaction which shapes nation-building. --Ang Cheng Guan ""Journal of American-East Asian Relations"" Impressively written and well-researched. --Michitake Aso ""Journal of Asian Studies"" This book is a major achievement that fundamentally recasts our understanding of twentieth-century Vietnamese history. Its deftly written chapters, simultaneously expansive in their concerns yet full of nuance and telling narrative detail, will become the new starting point for further research on the history of southern Vietnam. --Mark Philip Bradley ""American Historical Review"" (1/1/2012 12:00:00 AM) This work is an original and innovative approach to the contemporary history of Viet Nam. . . . I can recommend this book for graduate students, teachers of colonial and postcolonial Viet Nam, as well as anyone interested in the nexus of environment, modernization, and development. --Pierre Brocheux ""Environmental History""" Quagmire is also an example of the challenges faced when trying to translate ambitions in historical narrative. How to tell a story of such complexity and nuance? . . . I expect [the answer] will come pretty close to the way Biggs has written his story. --Maurits Ertsen ""Technology and Culture"" Quagmire offers a neat and fresh storyline, explaining that nation-builders failed to understand the serpentine watercourses and landscapes of the Mekong Delta. . . . Biggs shines a light on the everyday struggles of famers and migrants. . . --Geoffrey Cain ""Asian Affairs"" (1/1/2012 12:00:00 AM) [A] much-needed perspective on human efforts over time to shape this amphibious land/waterscape. . . . Biggs is clearly a major talent, who has written a path-breaking book that enables us to see, experience, and interpret the delta anew. --Peter A. Coclanis ""Journal of Contemporary Asia"" Biggs has authored an exciting work that clearly breaks new ground. I have little doubt that the book will be well received by multiple audiences. --Shawn McHale ""Asian Studies Review"" Biggs's command of the sources, both Vietnamese and Western, is impressive, and his book will interest historians of the Vietnam War as background information. Otherwise, it is an important contribution to Vietnam history and geography. Summing up: Highly recommended. -- ""Choice"" (1/1/2011 12:00:00 AM) Blending disciplinary perspectives from history, anthropology, and geography, Biggs approaches the Mekong Delta as a landscape--as things on the land, as people, institutions, discourses, artifacts, metaphors, and eco-logics--with a particularly unstable morphology. --Michael Kantor ""H-HISTGEOG"" (1/1/2013 12:00:00 AM) I learned that it is not a linear development how people use the environment or how the environment affects people; rather it is a dynamic equilibrium between humans and environment, and it is that interaction which shapes nation-building. --Ang Cheng Guan ""Journal of American-East Asian Relations"" Impressively written and well-researched. --Michitake Aso ""Journal of Asian Studies"" This book is a major achievement that fundamentally recasts our understanding of twentieth-century Vietnamese history. Its deftly written chapters, simultaneously expansive in their concerns yet full of nuance and telling narrative detail, will become the new starting point for further research on the history of southern Vietnam. --Mark Philip Bradley ""American Historical Review"" (1/1/2012 12:00:00 AM) This work is an original and innovative approach to the contemporary history of Viet Nam. . . . I can recommend this book for graduate students, teachers of colonial and postcolonial Viet Nam, as well as anyone interested in the nexus of environment, modernization, and development. --Pierre Brocheux ""Environmental History"" Author InformationEugene S. Hunn is professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Washington; E. Thomas Morning Owl is Umatilla master speaker for the CTUIR Language Program; Phillip E. Cash Cash is a PhD candidate in anthropology and linguistics at the University of Arizona; Jennifer Karson Engum is anthropologist / ethnographer for the CTUIR Cultural Resources Protection Program. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |