Ask the Author: Viet Thanh Nguyen
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Viet Thanh Nguyen
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Viet Thanh Nguyen
sorry for the delay! If you've already read The Committed, then A Man of Two Faces
Viet Thanh Nguyen
I don't recall doing that, so it mus be an error
Viet Thanh Nguyen
probably not theory, but A Man of Two Faces directly addresses mental health and illness
Viet Thanh Nguyen
thanks for reading! extra points for it being The Committed
Viet Thanh Nguyen
good question. I imagine the pronouns might shift depending on mood, or maybe if it's an older me addressing a younger me, but mày is probably the best.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
thanks for sharing, and glad to know the book affected you. The Refugees is in translation in Vietnam now. The Sympathizer is in process.
tinaathena
Thanks Quyen! I do not live in a community with many Vietnamese people so to see the term "Việt Kiều" really catapulted me back to my childhood and vi
Thanks Quyen! I do not live in a community with many Vietnamese people so to see the term "Việt Kiều" really catapulted me back to my childhood and visiting VN with my family. Growing up, I always thought of the term as an insult and it was synonymous with betrayer - I'm curious if you had the same experience. Or was it more of a neutral term, something akin to "ex-pat" or is it lightly barbed like the way Americans use the word "immigrant."
And to echo Quyen, Thanks so much to you Viet Nguyen for your info and for the book. I've been telling everyone who will listen about it and it has inspired me to get writing again. ...more
Feb 27, 2018 03:58PM · flag
And to echo Quyen, Thanks so much to you Viet Nguyen for your info and for the book. I've been telling everyone who will listen about it and it has inspired me to get writing again. ...more
Feb 27, 2018 03:58PM · flag
Quyen
Apologies, tinaathena—for some reason I didn't see the notification for your comment before, so I'm a little late on the response. To answer your ques
Apologies, tinaathena—for some reason I didn't see the notification for your comment before, so I'm a little late on the response. To answer your question, Việt Kiều is an interesting term for me, too—and something that has evolved for me in a slow process to where I began to use it to describe myself. I felt the same way about it until I lived in Vietnam a few years ago and came to feel it and understand it as neutral. I think that the younger generations have reclaimed the term so that it isn't seen as an insult any longer and can't be used in that way—in Vietnam, at least. I understand your reaction and thoughts on it, though. It's a term I use carefully when I'm back home in the US because it is so contentious. Thank you for sharing your experiences around it—it's a nice reminder for me of how differently the language has developed in different parts of the world—and of how differently I personally use the language now after growing up in the US, speaking an Americanized version of Vietnamese, then living in Vietnam during my adult life and connecting with the language in a completely new way.
...more
Apr 09, 2018 10:19AM · flag
Apr 09, 2018 10:19AM · flag
Viet Thanh Nguyen
You can see some answers here:
https://vietnguyen.info/2017/viet-tha...
https://vietnguyen.info/2016/the-hidd...
https://vietnguyen.info/2017/viet-tha...
https://vietnguyen.info/2016/the-hidd...
Viet Thanh Nguyen
You could read my essays and interviews, and my nonfiction book Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War, to get a better sense of what I think.
https://vietnguyen.info/category/essays
https://vietnguyen.info/category/inte...
https://vietnguyen.info/category/essays
https://vietnguyen.info/category/inte...
Michael Rieman
Thank you for those excellent references! I had just begun to watch Ken Burns' tv series on the Vietnam War (the name most Americans use for that conf
Thank you for those excellent references! I had just begun to watch Ken Burns' tv series on the Vietnam War (the name most Americans use for that conflict in any case), and your essays provide interesting (if uncomfortable) support for some of the troubling aspects of the history raised by the documentary.
...more
Sep 18, 2017 01:29PM · flag
Sep 18, 2017 01:29PM · flag
Viet Thanh Nguyen
Jade Ngoc Quang Huynh's South Wind Changing; Duong Thu Huong's Memories of a Pure Spring; Nghia M. Vo's Bamboo Gulag
Viet Thanh Nguyen
I wrote my first "book" in the third grade, and wrote intermittently through college and graduate school. I started writing (fiction) more regularly in my late twenties and very seriously in my early thirties. Writing is a life-long practice and vocation, and it's never too late to start.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
Ghosts are very important. Most Vietnamese believe that the dead need to be worshiped at an ancestral shrine in the home, and that the graves of the dead need to be tended regularly, all to appease their souls. Those who die badly--violently, unnaturally, or away from home--become "wandering souls." Ghosts can be both benevolent and malevolent. Visits by the dead soon after death are often not supposed to bee frightening, as you say. The dead come to say goodbye.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
We are clearly making progress as a species. We no longer organize ourselves by tribes and villages, or city-states, but by nations. So our notion of community has grown ever larger. But are capacity for killing has grown too. So even if we may be less likely to go to war now, we have the ability to inflict much greater destruction if we do. Whether or not our growing capacity for empathy and inclusiveness will beat our growing capacity for total annihilation obviously remains to be seen.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
Zizek and many other scholars of ideology, spectacle, and representation were important--Althusser, Gramsci, DeBord, Trinh T. Minh-ha, to name a few.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
you can see some of the exchanges happening between US and VN with food and travel (regardless of language). With language taken into account, there is some exchange in music and film, but it's all in Vietnamese, or else it's an American impact on Vietnam. Then there's education, with tens of thousands of Vietnamese students studying in the US. I hope they will have a significant impact on Vietnam when they return.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
aw, thanks! I'm delighted that you're delighted.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
Hi Steven, I have a new book coming out in February 2017, The Refugees, a short story collection. I am writing the sequel to The Sympathizer, and it is set mostly in Paris, so will deal with Vietnamese/French history.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...
Viet Thanh Nguyen
there are a few. Perhaps you can begin with Thomas Bass's Vietnamerica.
http://www.thomasbass.com/vietnameric...
http://www.thomasbass.com/vietnameric...
Viet Thanh Nguyen
sorry, I didn't write about Lowell. The question was whether I'd been to Lowell.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
I have visited, briefly, the college campus there. But didn't see the Vietnamese community itself.
Chrysanthe
Lowell, MA, has a big Cambodian population, not Vietnamese. Maybe Steve R is confused.
Nov 17, 2016 08:57AM
Nov 17, 2016 08:57AM
Crystal
Also if Steve R is looking for a book to discuss the Cambodian community of Lowell, I would recommend Gish Jen's World and Town, which is about exactl
Also if Steve R is looking for a book to discuss the Cambodian community of Lowell, I would recommend Gish Jen's World and Town, which is about exactly that and she spent time there in order to write it.
...more
Nov 19, 2016 06:03AM
Nov 19, 2016 06:03AM
Steve
There's no confusion: there's a large Cambodian community but there's also many Vietnamese. As I wrote in my original comments, I grew up in a town ne
There's no confusion: there's a large Cambodian community but there's also many Vietnamese. As I wrote in my original comments, I grew up in a town next to Lowell, so there's no confusion.
...more
Nov 26, 2016 11:37AM
Nov 26, 2016 11:37AM
Viet Thanh Nguyen
no, but there are many scholars and artists who deal with the (mis)representation (or exclusion) of the other, or non-white, in dominant culture, from film, tv, literature, art, etc.
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