Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Piracy in World History
- 2 “Publique Enemies to Mankind”: International Pirates as a Product of International Politics
- 3 All at Sea: Locke’s Tyrants and the Pyrates of Political Thought
- 4 The Colonial Origins of Theorizing Piracy’s Relation to Failed States
- 5 The Bugis-Makassar Seafarers: Pirates or Entrepreneurs?
- 6 Piracy in India’s Western Littoral: Reality and Representation
- 7 Holy Warriors, Rebels, and Thieves: Defining Maritime Violence in the Ottoman Mediterranean
- 8 Piracy, Empire, and Sovereignty in Late Imperial China
- 9 Persistent Piracy in Philippine Waters: Metropolitan Discourses about Chinese, Dutch, Japanese, and Moro Coastal Threats, 1570–1800
- 10 Sweden, Barbary Corsairs, and the Hostis Humani Generis: Justifying Piracy in European Political Thought
- 11 “Pirates of the Sea and the Land”: Concurrent Vietnamese and French Concepts of Piracy during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 12 Pirate Passages in Global History: Afterword
- Index
11 - “Pirates of the Sea and the Land”: Concurrent Vietnamese and French Concepts of Piracy during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Piracy in World History
- 2 “Publique Enemies to Mankind”: International Pirates as a Product of International Politics
- 3 All at Sea: Locke’s Tyrants and the Pyrates of Political Thought
- 4 The Colonial Origins of Theorizing Piracy’s Relation to Failed States
- 5 The Bugis-Makassar Seafarers: Pirates or Entrepreneurs?
- 6 Piracy in India’s Western Littoral: Reality and Representation
- 7 Holy Warriors, Rebels, and Thieves: Defining Maritime Violence in the Ottoman Mediterranean
- 8 Piracy, Empire, and Sovereignty in Late Imperial China
- 9 Persistent Piracy in Philippine Waters: Metropolitan Discourses about Chinese, Dutch, Japanese, and Moro Coastal Threats, 1570–1800
- 10 Sweden, Barbary Corsairs, and the Hostis Humani Generis: Justifying Piracy in European Political Thought
- 11 “Pirates of the Sea and the Land”: Concurrent Vietnamese and French Concepts of Piracy during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 12 Pirate Passages in Global History: Afterword
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter turns to the prominent role of “piracy” in French colonial expansion in Vietnam in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The author demonstrates how the long-standing European fascination with pirates in popular culture made it expedient for French colonial officials to label anyone who resisted French colonial expansion in Vietnam as pirates, even if this meant that the concept was stretched to its limit and applied to bandits as well as Vietnamese court officials who had never set foot on a sea-going vessel. Amirell also juxtaposes the French and Vietnamese concepts associated with piracy, banditry, and subversion and shows how the Vietnamese king Tu Duc, not unreasonably, accused the French navy of piracy.
Keywords: France, Vietnam, colonial expansion, Tu Duc, concepts of piracy
For at least three hundred years, since the heyday of Atlantic piracy in the early eighteenth century, pirates have been the object of a particular fascination for Europeans. As a result of this long cultural historical development, today, the word “pirate” conjures up a vast array of associations that are partly based on historical events and personalities and partly based on imagination, such as fictive accounts, songs, poems, paintings, films, and games. On the one hand, throughout European history, pirates have been associated with defiance, subversion, and rebellion, and have often been seen as constituting existential threats to society, peace and order, international trade, and the security of seafarers and coastal communities around the world. On the other hand, pirates, both historical and fictional, have also been seen as romantic heroes and non-conforming revolutionaries or champions of the common people. The word pirate, in the modern European understanding of the word, thus has a wide range of social, cultural, and political connotations that by far transcend its generic meaning of a robber or bandit operating at sea.
Against this background, the concept of piracy has been used for centuries in numerous contexts, often far removed from the original meaning of the word. This chapter explores one such case, in which the concept of piracy was stretched to its limits, namely, when the French invaded and subsequently colonized Vietnam in the second half of the nineteenth century.
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- Information
- Piracy in World History , pp. 245 - 266Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2021