Book contents
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I Empires, Nations, and Revolutions
- Part II The French Indochina War
- Part III The Two Vietnams
- 12 The Geneva Conference of 1954
- 13 Eisenhower and Vietnam
- 14 Ngô Đình Diệm and the Birth of the Republic of Vietnam
- 15 Nation-Building in South Vietnam after Geneva
- 16 Building Socialism in North Vietnam after Geneva
- 17 North Vietnam’s Road to War
- 18 Laos between Two Wars
- 19 The Origins of the Insurgency in South Vietnam
- 20 Kennedy and Vietnam
- 21 The Crisis of 1963 and the Origins of the Vietnam War
- Index
16 - Building Socialism in North Vietnam after Geneva
from Part III - The Two Vietnams
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2025
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- The Cambridge History of The Vietnam War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I Empires, Nations, and Revolutions
- Part II The French Indochina War
- Part III The Two Vietnams
- 12 The Geneva Conference of 1954
- 13 Eisenhower and Vietnam
- 14 Ngô Đình Diệm and the Birth of the Republic of Vietnam
- 15 Nation-Building in South Vietnam after Geneva
- 16 Building Socialism in North Vietnam after Geneva
- 17 North Vietnam’s Road to War
- 18 Laos between Two Wars
- 19 The Origins of the Insurgency in South Vietnam
- 20 Kennedy and Vietnam
- 21 The Crisis of 1963 and the Origins of the Vietnam War
- Index
Summary
When, how, and why did the Vietnam War begin? Although its end is dated with great precision to April 30, 1975, there is no agreement as to when it began. The Vietnam War was an enormously complex conflict and even though any comprehensive reckoning of its causes must include the role of the United States, it did not begin as an “American War.” This volume presents the scholarship that has flourished since the 1990s to situate the war and its origins within longer chronologies and wider interpretative perspectives. The Vietnam War was a war for national liberation and an episode of major importance in the Global Cold War. Yet it was also a civil war, and civil warfare was a defining feature of the conflict from the outset. Understanding the Vietnamese and Indochinese origins of the Vietnam War is a critical first step toward reckoning with the history of this violent, costly, and multilayered war.
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- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War , pp. 347 - 367Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024