The sudden assertion of human criteria within a dehumanising framework of political manipulation can be like a flash of lightning illuminating a dark landscape
The sudden assertion of human criteria within a dehumanising framework of political manipulation can be like a flash of lightning illuminating a dark landscape
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Sophie Quinn-JudgeSophie Quinn-Judge is associate director of the Center for Vietnamese Philosophy, Culture and Society, Temple University, Philadelphia. She is the author of Ho Chi Minh: The Missing Years, 1919-1941 (C Hurst, 2003). Recent articlesHoang Minh Chinh: the honourable dissident Vietnam's official commemoration of the Tet offensive of 1968 and the country's unification in 1975 is shadowed by the influential example of a courageous critic of the country's ruling system, says Sophie Quinn-Judge. Who are the Vietnamese in 2005?Writers, poets, and scholars among the virtual, worldwide Vietnamese imagined community are reinventing the moral foundations of the Vietnamese nation for an age of globalisation, says Sophie Quinn-Judge. (This article was first published on 29 April 2005) Vietnam: the necessary voicesThe spectrum of commitment embodied in the lives of two recently deceased figures of modern Vietnam reveals much about the country's unfinished political and ethical journey, says Sophie Quinn-Judge. |
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