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Journal Article

Citation

Rydstrom H. Eur. J. Womens Stud. 2015; 22(2): 191-207.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1350506814538860

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

By drawing on testimonies gathered in rural Vietnam, this article focuses on the violence to which local inhabitants were subjected when Vietnam was under French rule (1883-1954). On a self-imposed 'civilizing mission', the control of local bodies was critical for the colonial powers and they became the subject of brutal abuse. Violence was exercised with impunity in the occupied areas and rendered 'logic' in accordance with western imaginations about racial superiority. While such ideas informed colonial terror in general, the differentiated registers of terror implemented in regard to women and men disclose how sovereign attempts of reducing local inhabitants to bare life were designed, in addition to race, along the lines of gender and sexuality. Vietnamese testimonies from the French colonial period reveal experiences of a reality of horror which in the article is considered through the prism of four different body typologies; typologies which elucidate the symbolic, physical, and imaginary metamorphoses through which women and men in differentiated ways were being increasingly dehumanized in the encounter with the colonial power.


Language: en

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