Commemoration and the State: Memory and Legitimacy in Vietnam

TitleCommemoration and the State: Memory and Legitimacy in Vietnam
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsEdyta Roszko
JournalSojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia
Volume25
Issue1
Pagination1-28
ISSN1793-2858
Abstract

Abstract Abstract:The commemorations of historical figures, both public and private, have become a powerful tool for politicians and historians in Vietnam to reconfigure the past, national heroes, and revolutionary martyrs. One of the state's commemorative projects is devoted to glorifying the Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) soldiers, and preserving all temples and relicts related to their activities on Ly Son Island. This state project may be seen as a strategy to claim sovereignty in the face of competition from several nation states, including China, for control over the two archipelagos. Conversely, the Vietnamese state is also challenged by alternative accounts from the Ly Son people, who have introduced their own narratives. This essay analyses contestations over memory and the attempts of the Ly Son villagers to establish continuity with the past through their ancestors in order to demonstrate solidarity, patriotism, and their own prestige.

URLhttp://muse.jhu.edu/journals/sojourn_journal_of_social_issues_in_southeast_asia/v025/25.1.roszko.html
Short TitleCommemoration and the State