Vietnamese Women at War
Fighting for Ho Chi Minh and the Revolution
Sandra C. Taylor
New in paperback: February 2003
xii, 170 pages, 30 photographs, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1256-7, $19.95
For as long as the Vietnamese
people fought against foreign enemies, women were a vital part
of that struggle. The victory over the French at Dien Bien Phu
is said to have involved hundreds of thousands of women, and
many of the names in Viet Cong unit rosters were female. These
women were living out the ancient saying of their country, "When
war comes, even women have to fight."
Women from Hanoi and the countryside fought alongside their
male counterparts in both the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
military in their wars against the South Vietnamese government
and its French and American allies from 1945 to 1975. Sandra
Taylor now draws on interviews with many of these women and on
an array of newly opened archives to illuminate their motivations,
experiences, and contributions--presenting not cold facts but
real people.
These women were the wives, mothers, daughters, and sisters
of men recruited into military service; and because the war lasted
so long, women from more than one generation of the same family
often participated in the struggle. Some learned to fire weapons
and lay traps, or to serve as village patrol guards and intelligence
agents; others were propagandists and recruiters or helped keep
the supply lines flowing.
Taylor relates how this war for liberation from foreign oppressors
also liberated Vietnamese women from centuries of Confucian influence
that had made them second-class citizens. She reveals that Communism's
promise of freedom from those strictures influenced their involvement
in the war, and also shares the irony that their sex gave them
an advantage in battle or subterfuge over Western opponents blinded
by gender stereotypes.
As their country continues to modernize, Vietnamese Women
at War preserves the stories of the "long-haired warriers"
while they remain alive and before the war fades from memory.
By showing that they were not victims of war but active participants,
it offers a wholly unique perspective on that conflict. This
rare study reveals much about gender roles and cultural differences
and reminds us of the ever-present human dimension of war.
Taylor greatly enhances our understanding of the contributions
of Vietnams women, providing vivid accounts of training,
deployment, strategy and tactics, propaganda activities, support
services, imprisonment and torture, and other aspects of their
involvement in the war. Recommended for all levels.--Choice
"From the 'long-haired army' that carried provisions through
the jungles at Dien Bien Phu to the female 'tunnel rats' at Cu
Chi in the South, women were the unsung heroes of Vietnam's war
of national liberation. Here, in this sympathetic and sometimes
gripping account, is their untold story. Recommended."--William
J. Duiker, author of Sacred War: Nationalism and Revolution
in a Divided Vietnam
"It was common knowledge among American soldiers in Vietnam
that women were sometimes brave and even ferocious fighters for
the North. Now at last in Sandra Taylor's fascinating Vietnamese
Women at War this story has been told in depth. This book
is a necessary piece in the complex puzzle of the Vietnam War."--Robert
Olen Butler, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for A Good Scent
from a Strange Mountain
"I am pleased to see more voices from Vietnamese women
telling their own stories. As Sandra Taylor reveals, we don't
see ourselves as victims but rather as victors and survivors,
following in the footsteps of our ancestors and honoring a tradition
that is 4,000 years old."--Le Ly Hayslip, author
of When Heaven and Earth Changed Places and Child of
War, Woman of Peace
"A thorough and thought-provoking account of one of the
least-known chapters of the Viet Nam War. Taylor's study of the
'long haired warriors' is an essential introduction for students
and promises to set the standard for years to come."--Robert
Brigham, author of The NLF's Foreign Relations and the
Vietnam War
"A very valuable book for courses on the Vietnam War
and in women's studies."--Marilyn B. Young, author
of The Vietnam War, 19451990
SANDRA C. TAYLOR is professor of history at the University
of Utah and author of Jewel of the Desert: Japanese American
Internment at Topaz.
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