Prehistory and Ideology in Cold War Southeast Asia: The Politics of Wartime Archaeology in Thailand and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1954–1975
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. DRV and Thailand, 1954–1975: An Overview
3. From Colonialist to Imperialist Archaeologies in Cold War Southeast Asia
4. Unearthing Prehistory in Wartime Southeast Asia
5. Southeast Asian Prehistoric Archaeology after the Cold War
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Among others see (Barnhisel 2015; McDaniel 2015; Saunders 2013). An early review of this growing historiography by Osgood (2002). The concept of ‘war of position’ was articulated in the 1930s by Antonio Gramsci (2007, p. 168). |
2 | Kaneko (1970, p. 3). Kaneko’s piece was an obituary for Robert von Heine-Geldern, a founding figure of Southeast Asian archaeology and proponent of diffusionism). By 1968, some 540,000 US ground troops were deployed in Vietnam. Fatal casualties, as recorded in DCAS, amounted to 16,899 in 1968 and 11,780 in 1969: <https://www.archives.gov/research/military/vietnam-war/casualty-statistics> (accessed on 20 March 2023). |
3 | ‘Imperialist or world-oriented archaeology is associated with a small number of states that enjoy or have exerted dominance over large parts of the world. … [Its practitioners] engage in much research in other countries and play a major role in training students who find employment abroad.’ Trigger (1984, p. 363). Trigger identifies in his article three imperialist archaeologies: British, Soviet and American. |
4 | Political archaeology has come under considerable scrutiny, starting with an article by Fowler (1987). See, among others, (Kane 2003; Kohl and Fawcett 1995). On Southeast Asia, see (Cherry 2009; Glover 1999, 2003; Peleggi 2002). |
5 | The Indochinese Union, formed in 1887, was a composite administrative construct. Vietnam was divided into three administrative regions: Tonkin in the north and Annam in the center were administered as protectorates, while Cochinchina was a formal colony. Cambodia and Laos, too, were protectorates whose monarchies were maintained as puppet institutions, such as the Nguyen dynasty of Vietnam. See (Brocheux and Hemery 2010). |
6 | Chinese sources place the total value of the PRC economic and military aid to Hanoi throughout the war in the region of USD 180–200 million (Khoo 2010, p. 25). |
7 | A CIA memorandum dated 23 February 1966 suggested that, in addition to political convenience, the Soviet Bloc’s ‘limited commitment of resources in support of the North Vietnamese’ might ‘also reflect in part the DRV’s limited capacity to absorb material aid, particularly complex modern weaponry’. Released CIA memo: Soviet Bloc Aid to the DRV: Evidence of Tokenism and Dissension (RDP78T02025R00080002004-6), 8–10. |
8 | US intelligence’s estimate of Soviet aid to Vietnam from 1968 to 1973 as exceeding USD 3.1 billion (USD 1.765 billion in economic aid and USD 1.395 billion in military aid at the 1974 USD value) appears greatly exaggerated. Soviet aid to North Vietnam: <www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/vietnam/hist-2nd-indochina-ussr.htm> (accessed 20 March 2022). |
9 | On this aspect see (Randolph 1986). Aid figures from Girling (1981, pp. 235–36) and Kislenko (2004, pp. 65–96). The first amount included USD 940 million for defense and security, USD 250 for the construction of airbases and USD 760 million for the equipment and operating costs of the Thai troops. Some USD 850 million were additionally pumped into the Thai economy by US servicemen on rest and recreation leave from Vietnam. |
10 | The statement was contained in a joint communiqué issued by the State Department during the visit of the Thai minister of Foreign Affairs, Thanat Khoman. Kislenko (2003, pp. 224–25). |
11 | Surprisingly enough, there is no historical study of the CPT in English; a brief overview in (Peleggi 2007, pp. 127–34). A historical sketch can be found in the propaganda publication, The Road to Victory (1978), available on Internet Archive: <https://archive.org/details/TheRoadToVictoryDocumentsFromTheCommunistPartyOfThailand> (accessed on 20 March 2023). |
12 | Among the analyses of the democratic interlude 1973-76 and its aftermath, see (Anderson 1977; Morell and Samutvanija 1981). |
13 | Cherry (pp. 94–101. The papers delivered to the 1932 congress were published in (Praehistorica Asiae Orientalis: Premier Congrès des Préhistoriens d’Extrême-Orient 1932). |
14 | Boriskovsky (1962). This was the combined, abridged translation of two field reports Boriskovsky had published in Soviet Archaeology and in Herald of the USSR Academy of Science in 1962. |
15 | Back in the Soviet Union, Borisvosky succeeded his mentor as head of the Paleolithic Section of the Institute for the History of Material Culture and as professor in the Department of Archaeology at Leningrad University. Klejn (2012, p. 343). |
16 | Boriskovsky (1966). The English translation of this book was published in seven installments in Soviet Anthropology and Archaeology between 1968 and 1970 (Boriskovsky 1968a, 1968b, 1969a, 1969b, 1970a, 1970b). |
17 | Boriskovsky (1968a, pp. 26–28). Boriskovsky acknowledged the discovery in the RVN of a Neolithic site (Hang Gon) near Saigon and the research carried out in the late 1950s by the French ethnographers Pierre B. Lafont and George Condominas as well as the Swedish archaeologist Olov Janse, who in the 1940s had conducted the first scientific excavations at the Dong Son site. |
18 | In Europe, the exhibition was on view from February 1963 to May 1965 in the cities of Bonn (West Germany), The Hague, London, Paris, Brussels, Florence, and Copenhagen; in the United States from October 1960 to March 1962 in Bloomington (Indiana), New York, Boston, Toledo (Ohio), Seattle, San Francisco, and Honolulu. |
19 | The tour was promoted by Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat as part of the royalist revival he promoted to legitimize his authoritarian regime. In Europe, Thailand’s royal couple met with peers in the United Kingdom and Scandinavia (as well as republican heads of states and even the Pope); the hallmark of the visit to the United States was, however, the meeting with pop icons, such as Elvis Presley and Benny Goodman. In New York, the Thai royals assisted to the Broadway musical The King and I, based on the memoires of Anna Leonowens, English governess to the court of King Mongkut, played on stage (and later on the screen) by Yul Brinner, which was (and still is) officially banned in Thailand. |
20 | Typical works include Riggs (1966) and Jacobs (1971). On American universities’ involvement in Cold War research, see (Chomsky et al. 1997; Robin 2001). |
21 | For the formulation of the New Archaeology, see (Wiley and Philips 1958; Binford 1962). See also (Smith 2004, p. 39). |
22 | Cherry (2009, pp. 118–22). The thesis of Van Lang as a federation of ‘fifteen tribes’ (possibly meaning various ethnicities, not just Vietnamese people) was proposed in article by Nguyen Link and Hoang Hung that was published in March 1968 in Tap San Nghien Cuu Lich Su (Journal of Historical Research), no. 108. |
23 | The phrase ‘Green Revolution’ was coined in 1968 by William S. Gaud, the then director of USAID, the national agency for international development, as the semantic opposite of Asian and Latin American ‘red’ revolutions, whose threat the ‘Green Revolution’ exorcised through the promise of agricultural plenitude. For a critical appraisal, see (Perkins 1997). |
24 | The interview was published on the English-language Bangkok daily, The Nation (10 September 2009). |
25 | Elizabeth Lyons, a Bangkok-based American art historian who had helped setting up the Ban Chiang expedition, reminisced a decade later: ‘The University Museum team lived in a Thai house in the village, ate local food, worked together in the hot sun, drunk cold beer together in the evening and argued out the problems together. Perfectly normal American procedure, and understood and welcomed by the thoroughly independent, never colonized Thais.’ Lyons and Rainey (1982, p. 10; emphasis added). |
26 | Charles Higham, written communication to the author (14 July 2016). |
27 | In November 2014, 554 artifacts originally removed from Ban Chiang that had been acquired by the Bowers Museum, in Orange County, California, were repatriated as a result of a non-prosecution agreement between parties. The handover ceremony took place at the Bangkok National Museum in the presence of the Thai Minister of Culture, the FAD Director-General, and the United States chargé d’affaires. National News Bureau of Thailand (2014). |
28 | In 2008, Joyce White, Chet’s Gorman doctoral student who after his untimely death in 1981 took on the task of dating excavation finds in the laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania Museum, was quoted verbatim in a New York Times article as remembering crates of material shipped from Ban Chiang, which included ‘small finds—bronze bracelets, clay rollers … and bags and bags of broken pottery’. Finkel (2008): <https://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/17/arts/design/17fink.html> (accessed on 20 March 2023). |
29 | Articles on Ban Chiang appeared on the New York Times (8 June 1975), the Washington Post (8 November 1975), and Time Magazine (31 May 1976), as well as on the British magazine, New Scientist (10 June 1976). |
30 | Boriskovsky (1970c, p. 263). Boriskovsky cited here the Russian translation (1963) of an essay by Sharp, who had been conducting field research in Thailand since the late 1940s and was among the anthropologists that came under fire during the ‘Thailand controversy’ for collaborating with US government agencies. |
31 | Gould-Davies (2003, p. 196; original emphasis). Metallic finds from the Archaeological Salvage Program’s excavations in Northeast Thailand were sent for analysis to the Azerbaijan Academy of Sciences. See (I. R. Selimkhanov 1979). |
32 | White (1986). In disagreement with White is Charles Higham, emeritus of the University of Otago, New Zealand, who was a number of the Ban Chiang mission in 1975–76. See (Higham 1893, 2014). |
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Peleggi, M. Prehistory and Ideology in Cold War Southeast Asia: The Politics of Wartime Archaeology in Thailand and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1954–1975. Histories 2023, 3, 98-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3020008
Peleggi M. Prehistory and Ideology in Cold War Southeast Asia: The Politics of Wartime Archaeology in Thailand and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1954–1975. Histories. 2023; 3(2):98-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3020008
Chicago/Turabian StylePeleggi, Maurizio. 2023. "Prehistory and Ideology in Cold War Southeast Asia: The Politics of Wartime Archaeology in Thailand and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1954–1975" Histories 3, no. 2: 98-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3020008
APA StylePeleggi, M. (2023). Prehistory and Ideology in Cold War Southeast Asia: The Politics of Wartime Archaeology in Thailand and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1954–1975. Histories, 3(2), 98-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3020008