Watching Vietnamese Films in Chinese (LMK Vlog #04)
This vlog introduces and discusses a 1969 film from North Vietnam called "The Front is Calling" (Tiền Tuyến Gọi). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS2rYAPGKiI
This vlog introduces and discusses a 1969 film from North Vietnam called "The Front is Calling" (Tiền Tuyến Gọi). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS2rYAPGKiI
This week's Vlog is about totems, a book by anthropologist Đinh Hồng Hải (Những biểu tượng đặc trưng trong văn hoá truyền thống Việt Nam, tập 3: Các con vật…
This video is of a conversation that we had in the summer of 2017 with Nguyễn Sử, the author of a recent book on the history of Vietnamese calligraphy (Lịch…
[I posted this piece on the Content Asian Studies site. Given that it covers topics (the future of Humanities/area studies education in and outside of Southeast Asia) that overlap with…
I recently had the pleasure of reading and writing a review of Kathlene Baldanza’s Ming China and Vietnam: Negotiating Borders in Early Modern Asia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016). Published…
I think it's time to start Vlogging. Here is my first Vlog, on Phan Bội Châu's 1908 "Examination of Vietnamese History" (Việt Nam quốc sử kháo 越南國史考) and its Vietnamese translation.…
There is a new hotel in the heart of Saigon that is unique. It is called “The Myst Dong Khoi,” and what makes it unique is that it demonstrates that I would call a “trans-contemporary approach to heritage.”
Let me explain what I mean by that.

Seven years after starting "Le Minh Khai's Southeast Asian History blog," I feel like all of the world has changed dramatically except for one part. . . the academic world.…
In the second chapter of Việt Nam: A History from Earliest Times to the Present author Ben Kiernan has a passage where he writes about Việt society in the third century AD.
His point in this passage is to argue that even after a long period of Chinese rule, indigenous social and religious practices persisted.
To quote, he states that,
“Even after three hundred years and fifty years [sic] of imperial rule in Jiaozhi and Jiuzhen, and even as Confucianism took root among the emerging elite, the Chinese were still able to rule much of the countryside only indirectly, if at all. Việt customs and gender relations persisted.” (92)
What were some of these customs and gender relations? One, Kiernan argues, concerned the involvement of women in the performance of certain religious rites.
Engaging With Vietnam, the only annual Vietnam-focused multidisciplinary conference in the world will hold its ninth conference in Hồ Chí Minh City/Bình Dương/An Giang from 27 December 2017 to 4…