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 III
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I The Late Vietnam War
- Part II The Postwar Era
- Part III Legacies
- 20 The Vietnam War and International Law
- 21 Environmental Legacies of the Vietnam War
- 22 The Vietnamese Diaspora
- 23 The Vietnam War in Vietnamese Official and Personal Memory
- 24 The Vietnam War in American Culture
- 25 The Specter of Vietnam
- 26 Vietnam’s Search for Its Place in the World
- Index
22 - The Vietnamese Diaspora
from Part III - Legacies
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 III
- General Introduction
- Introduction
- Part I The Late Vietnam War
- Part II The Postwar Era
- Part III Legacies
- 20 The Vietnam War and International Law
- 21 Environmental Legacies of the Vietnam War
- 22 The Vietnamese Diaspora
- 23 The Vietnam War in Vietnamese Official and Personal Memory
- 24 The Vietnam War in American Culture
- 25 The Specter of Vietnam
- 26 Vietnam’s Search for Its Place in the World
- Index
Summary
The fall of Saigon marked the end of the Vietnam War as well as the most dramatic turning point in the history of the Vietnamese diaspora. From the mid 1970s and the early 1990s, tens of thousands of Vietnamese refugees were resettled in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Western Europe. Their lives were defined by concurrent and overlapping experiences of national loss, family separation, and difficulties among their loved ones in Vietnam amidst their own survival and adaptation in the new societies. They constructed their exilic identity through a host of media and built exilic communities through internal migration. Starting in the late 1980s, legal migration led tens of thousands of other Vietnamese to Little Saigon communities. In turn, they have enlarged the economic and political prowess of those communities, and helped to shift the collective experience from an exilic identity to a transnational identity.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Vietnam War , pp. 496 - 515Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024