Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewAndrew Rotter's anthology on the Vietnam War has always been the best book available on this conflict. This third edition has been substantially revised. Rotter has retained those articles that are essential for understanding the scope and complexity of the Vietnam War and has included new articles that will give students even more insight into the many facets of American and Southeast Asian history that continue to haunt us to this day. -- Steven Hood, Ursinus College
Light at the End of the Tunnel is the best Vietnam War anthology available. Andrew Rotter’s freshman-friendly twenty-page capsule history of this complex conflict is a godsend to teachers and worth the price of the book all by itself. I didn't think this anthology could get any better, but darned if Rotter hasn't pulled it off. -- Seth Jacobs, Boston College
As in the earlier editions, Andrew Rotter shows a keen understanding of the best ways to enhance classroom debate, compiling a text that is accessible, readable, and sensitive to the deep interest in Vietnam shared by today's students. In its diversity and centrality of topics, its balanced inclusion of readable, accessible and academically respected articles, and its genuine tolerance and sympathy, this text remains one of the best options available in support of Vietnam courses. -- Susan Farnsworth, Trinity (Washington) University
Table of ContentsChapter 1: Getting In, 1945–1952 1. Ho Chi Minh: The Untried Gamble 2. The United States, Its Allies and the Bao Dai Experiment Chapter 2: Fighting Shy, 1953–1961 3. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Wholehearted Support of Ngo Dinh Diem 4. Geneva, 1954: The Precarious Peace 5. The CIA Comes to Vietnam Chapter 3: Digging In, 1961–1968 6. No "Non-Essential Areas": Kennedy and Vietnam 7. The Tonkin Gulf Resolution 8. Lyndon Johnson Chooses War 9. The Tet Offensive, 1968 10. A Dissenter in the Administration Chapter 4: Getting Out, 1968–1975 11. Nixon, Kissinger, and a Pax Americana 12. Bombing Hanoi, Mining Haiphong, and the Moscow Summit 13. Stabbed in the Back Chapter 5: Allies and Enemies 14. Ngo Dinh Diem, the Impossible Ally 15. Ngo Dinh Diem, Modernizer 16. The Foreign Policy of North Vietnam 17. The National Liberation Front and the Land Chapter 6: The Battlefield 18. Getting Hit 19. Feeling Cold 20. Nursing and Disillusionment 21. They Did Not Know Good From Evil 22. My Lai: The Killing Begins Chapter 7: International Dimensions of the War 23. The Soviet Union and American Escalation 24. China and American Escalation 25. The Vietnamese and Global Revolutions Chapter 8: Laos and Cambodia 26. The War in Laos 27. Bombing Cambodia: A Critique 28. Bombing Cambodia: A Defense Chapter 9: Interpreting the War 29. A Clash of Cultures 30. An Opportunity for Power 31. A Defense of Freedom 32. An Act of Imperialism 33. An Assertion of Manhood Chapter 10: The War in America 34. Working-Class War 35. Seeds of a Movement 36. Women at the Barricades, Then and Now Chapter 11: The Legacy of War 37. Saigon: The End and the Beginning 38. Homecoming USA 39. Amerasians: A People in Between Chapter 12: Afterword 40. Letting Go