Vietnam: The Definitive Oral History, Told from All Sides

Vietnam: The Definitive Oral History, Told from All Sides

by Christian G . Appy (Author)

Synopsis

In Vietnam , American author and professor, Christian G. Appy has created a staggering and monumental oral history of the type that is created only once in a generation. The vivid accounts of 135 men and women span the entire history of the Vietnam conflict from its murky origins in the 1940s to the chaotic fall of Saigon in 1975. The testimony in this book, sometimes detached and reflective, often raw and emotional, allows us to see and feel what this war meant to people on all sides - Americans and Vietnamese, generals and guerillas, policy makers and protesters, CIA operatives, pilots and doctors, artists and journalists, and a variety of ordinary citizens whose lives were swept up in a cataclysm that killed three million people. By turns harrowing, inspiring and revelatory, Vietnam is not a chronicle of facts and figures but a human history of the war. It makes clear what made the Vietnam War one of the most significant conflicts of the twentieth century and why it continues to generate such bitterly divisive moral and political debate. The voices in it show us how hard the war was fought, how much it destroyed, how passionately it was protested, and how far it reached into every crevice of daily life in both countries. Those involved speak eloquently, answering many of the toughest questions about the war that, until now, have too often been met with silence.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 608
Edition: First UK Edition
Publisher: Ebury Press
Published: 02 Nov 2006

ISBN 10: 0091910110
ISBN 13: 9780091910112
Book Overview: 'Of all the works on the Vietnam War, this is the big one...the book that was waiting to be written' - Studs Terkel, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author of The Good War

Author Bio
Christian G. Appy holds a Ph.D. in American Civilisation and has taught at both Harvard and MIT, where he was an Associate Professor of History. He is the author of Working-Class War: American Combat Soldiers and Vietnam and the editor of the series Culture, Politics, and the Cold War. He currently teaches at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.