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Vietnam Studies Group
Business Meeting, March 28, 2003
Minutes
Meeting convened at 7:10 pm. VSG Executive Committee members present:
Nora Taylor, Chair, Mike DiGregorio, Frank Proschan, Judith Henchy (Ex-Officio).
Chair introduced members of the delegation of Vietnamese ethnologists
supported by the Ford Foundation to participate in the both the "Vietnam
in the 21st century" conference and the AAS annual meeting: Nguyen
Van Huy, Director of Vietnam Museum of Ethnology, To Ngoc Thanh, Ngo
Duc Thinh, Do Quang Hung, Nguyen Chi Ben, Phan Thi Yen Tuyet, Ba Trong
Phu, Le Hong Ly and Truong Huyen Chi.
Minutes from 2002 meeting were approved
Chair announced that VSG donated $1,500 to the University of Washington
for continuing work on the Vietnam Researcher Database. Remaining VSG
funds amount to 567.64. Chair reported that the Southeast Asia Council
of the AAS was very impressed with VSG funding activities and promised
to help support future efforts.
With nine panels on Vietnam at the 2003 meeting, Vietnam panels are
once again the largest group of panels within Southeast Asia. Kenneth
George, Southeast Asia program coordinator for the 2003 meetings congratulated
VSG for its high number of panel proposals.
Chair reported that Ford Foundation continues to fund the participation
of Vietnamese scholars in AAS annual meetings. Southeast Asia Council
also agreed to fund one or two scholars from Southeast Asia to travel
to the United States whether for an AAS meeting or not.
Chair reported that the American Anthropological Association is interested
in forming a Southeast Asia section and needs 250 signatures to create
a group. Those interested should contact: Jennifer Munger at
jhmunger@wisc.edu.
Hue Tam Ho Tai reported on the conference entitled "Vietnam in
the 21st century: Journeys on the Ground and in the Imagination"
held at the American Museum of Natural History March 22-23. 19 papers
were presented in both Vietnamese and English.
Chair announced the "Vietnam: Journeys of Body, Mind and Spirit"
exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History along with several
exhibitions of Vietnamese art held in New York City galleries during
the month of March including: Vietnamese Woodblock Prints at the International
Print Center; Le Thiet Cuong at Plum Blossoms Gallery and Tran Luong
at the Cave in Williamsburg. The exhibition at the AMNH will travel
to Hanoi in 2004.
Chair asked group if anyone was interested in creating new listserves
for the Vietnam scholarly community. Judith Henchy replied that she
did not see a need considering Christopher Goscha's list based in France
which already overlaps with VSG listserve. Michele Thompson mentioned
that there are already a number of other subject specific lists, especially
those lists administered by Vern Weitzel on social sciences, development
and medicalsciences [devel-vn]. Chair mentioned the success of the www.talawas.org
virtual roundtable discussion as an example of possibilities for bringing
scholars of Vietnam around the world together over the internet.
Chair announced that Fulbright had called on Vietnam scholars to submit
applications for research in Vietnam. Frank Proschan clarified that
the Fulbright scholar program administered by CIES has expanded its
Vietnam and regional SE Asia opportunities and is looking for good applicants,
especially in the research grants.
Future conferences were announced including: ICAS in Singapore in 2003,
EUROSEAS in 2004, the International Vietnamese Studies Conference in
Ho Chi Minh City in 2004 and EuroViet in 2005. Mike DiGregorio, Ford
Foundation Program Officer in Hanoi, added that the Ho Chi Minh City
conference aims at a 500 person attendance and has discussed a possible
theme as "Vietnam on the road to development and integration."
Michele Thompson proposed a panel for the AAS meetings in San Diego
in 2004 on Traditional and Colonial Period Medicine.
Jayne Werner asked about availability of Vietnamese films for classroom
use. She asked "Who houses the films? Who makes them available
to institutions? Judith Henchy replied that some films are housed in
Wisconsin at the South and Southeast Asia Video Archive, although their
Vietnam holdings are limited. See: http://webcat.library.wisc.edu:3200/SEAvideo/
. Mike DiGregorio responded that UCLA film archives has some. See: http://www.cinema.ucla.edu/access/access_f.html.
One member added that two film directors came to the Joiner Center in
Boston and some films may be available there. University of Washington
has good holdings, both in the Libraries and the Center. See: http://depts.washington.edu/seac/media/media.html,
as does the University of Hawaii. The problem is with distribution for
teaching. Another member announced that there was a Vietnamese film
festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music last November but it was not
announced on the VSG listserve. She also added that Tran Van Thuy had
been at the William Joiner Center in Boston all year and travelled to
various film festivals and talks and had copies of his films "Chuyen
Tu Te" and "Violin at My Lai" with him. Pam McElwee commented
that films are available but they are difficult to gain access to. Quang
Phu Van (Vietnamese lecturer at Yale) announced that he had met with
the head of Hang Chuyen Phim Viet Nam last summer and that they were
open to making available a center for film distribution in the US; there
is some talk that Trang Tran (who is living in Hartford and is the editor
of the Vietnamese language magazine Nhip Song) may try to take this
on. Anyone who wants to know if this comes through can contact quang.van@yale.edu.
Susan Hammond from the Fund for Reconciliation and Development announced
the availability of "Song of the South" on DVD for purchase
through the FRD. Frank Proschan suggested that VSG support the development
of a filmography and guide to what films are available where, in what
formats; this could be a worthwhile project for getting further funds
from AAS or SEAC. Nobody in attendance volunteered to undertake such
a survey, but anyone interested is encouraged to contact the VSG chair.
Three new officers were elected to the Executive Committee:
Michele Thompson of Southern Connecticut State University
Truong Huyen Chi of the Vietnam National University
And Pamela McElwee of Yale University.
Continuing members are:
Nora Taylor, Arizona State University, Chair, term ending in 2005
Shaun Malarney, International Christian University, term ending in
2004
Helen Chauncey, University of Victoria, term ending in 2004
Steve Graw, Cornell University, term ending in 2004
Michael DiGregorio, Ford Foundation, Hanoi, term ending in 2004
Oscar Salemink, Free University, term ending in 2005
Frank Proschan, Smithsonian, term ending in 2005
Meeting was adjourned at 8:30pm
Post-conference announcements: Peter Zinoman was awarded the 2003 Benda
award for his book Colonial Bastille: A History of Imprisonment in Vietnam
1862-1940, University of California Press, 2001; A group of VSG members
drafted a letter to the editor of the New York Times denouncing the
war in Iraq.
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