UID:
almafu_9958936684002883
Format:
1 online resource :
,
15 b&w halftones, 1 diagram
ISBN:
9781501721342
Content:
With essays covering diverse topics, from seafood trade across the Vietnam-China border, to street traders in Hanoi, to gold shops in Ho Chi Minh City, Traders in Motion spans the fields of economic and political anthropology, geography, and sociology to illuminate how Vietnam's rapidly expanding market economy is formed and transformed by everyday interactions among traders, suppliers, customers, family members, neighbors, and officials.The contributions shed light on the micropolitics of local-level economic agency in the paradoxical context of Vietnam's socialist orientation and its contemporary neoliberal economic and social transformation. The essays examine how Vietnamese traders and officials engage in on-the-ground contestations to define space, promote or limit mobility, and establish borders, both physical and conceptual. The contributors show how trading experiences shape individuals' notions of self and personhood, not just as economic actors, but also in terms of gender, region, and ethnicity. Traders in Motion affords rich comparative insight into how markets form and transform and what those changes mean.Contributors:Lisa Barthelmes, Christine Bonnin, Gracia Clark, Annuska Derks, Kirsten W. Endres, Chris Gregory, Caroline Grillot, Erik Harms, Esther Horat, Gertrud Hüwelmeier, Ann Marie Leshkowich, Hy Van Luong, Minh T. N. Nguyen, Nguyen Thi Thanh Binh, Linda J. Seligmann, Allison Truitt, Sarah Turner
Note:
Frontmatter --
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Contents --
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Preface --
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Traders in Motion --
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Introduction: Space, Mobility, Borders, and Trading Frictions /
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Part I Space, Place, and Contentious Politics of Market Redevelopment --
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Introduction: The Spatial Politics of Marketplaces /
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Chapter One. Making the Marketplace: Traders, Cadres, and Bureaucratic Documents in Lào Cai City /
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Chapter Two. “Run and Hide When You See the Police”: Livelihood Diversification and the Politics of the Street Economy in Vietnam’s Northern Uplands /
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Chapter Three. Grand Designs? State Agendas and the Lived Realities of Market Redevelopment in Upland Northern Vietnam /
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Chapter Four. Ghost Markets and Moving Bazaars in Hanoi’s Urban Space /
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Part II Circuits of Mobility, Identities, and Power Relations --
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Introduction: Moving and Shaking /
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Chapter Five. A Mobile Trading Network from Central Coastal Vietnam: Growth, Social Network, and Gender /
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Chapter Six. Money, Risk Taking, and Playing: Shifting Masculinity in a Waste-Trading Community in the Red River Delta /
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Chapter Seven. “Strive to Make a Living” in the Era of Urbanization and Modernization: The Story of Petty Traders in a Hanoi Peri-urban Community /
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Chapter Eight. Dealing with Uncertainty: Itinerant Street Vendors and Local Officials in Hanoi /
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Part III Borderwork --
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Introduction: Constructing, Maintaining, and Navigating Boundaries /
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Chapter Nine. Regulations and Raids, or the Precarious Place of Gold Shops in Vietnam /
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Chapter Ten. Moralities of Commerce in a Northern Vietnamese Trading Community /
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Chapter Eleven. Fuel Trade: People, Places, and Transformations along the Coal Briquetting Chain /
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Chapter Twelve. Arbitrage over the Beilun/Kalong River: Chinese Adjustments to Border Trade Practices in Vietnam /
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Afterword /
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References --
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Contributors --
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Index
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In English.
Language:
English
DOI:
10.7591/9781501721342
URL:
https://www.degruyter.com/doi/book/10.7591/9781501721342
URL:
https://www.degruyter.com/doi/book/10.7591/9781501721342