Acknowledgements
Note on Text
Abbreviations
Map of Indochina, 1945
Introduction
PART I: THE EXTERNAL AND DOMESTIC PARAMETERS OF COLONIAL POLICY MAKING
Chapter 1. The Brazzaville Conference and its
Origins, 1940-1944: Policy Formulation and Myth Making on the
Congo
Chapter 2. The Republic Strikes Back, 1944-1945:
Brazzaville Policy and the Metropolitan Critique
Chapter 3. 'We are in the Midst of Colonial
Crisis': The Response to International and Colonial Change
Chapter 4. The Domestic Parameters of Colonial
Policy Making after the Liberation, 1944-1946
PART II: POLICY MAKING IN INDOCHINA AND ITS BREAKDOWN, 1945-1947
Chapter 5. Calculating the Stakes: Brazzaville
Policy and the 'Return' to Indochina, December 1943-September
1945
Chapter 6. The Primacy of Action: From the
'Return' to Saigon, October 1945, to the Signing of the Accords of
6 March 1946
Chapter 7. Who Rules: Paris or Saigon? The Dalat
Conference and the Cochinchina Policy, March-June 1946
Chapter 8. 'A Round of the Battle we are
Fighting': The Fontainebleau Conference, June-Septe,ber 1946
Chapter 9. The Narrowing of French Policy Options,
Autumn 1946: The Accords Policy Abandoned?
Chapter 10. 'The Tonkin Vespers', December 1946:
Burying the Accords Policy
Conclusion
Appendix I: The Administrative Structure of the
French Empire, 1945
Appendix II: Chronology of Events in France and
Indochina, 1944-1947
Bibliography
Index
Martin Shipway teaches in the Department of French, Birkbeck College, University of London.
"... this is an important book ... If I have gone on so long, it is out of enthusiasm for the story Shipway has to tell and the skillful way he tells it. This book is extremely well written, and I found reading it almost effortless ... I recommend this book to anyone interested in the origins of what may one day be considered the second thirty-years war of our 'short' century." · H-Net Reviews "... an important contribution to understanding the tangled and tragic unfolding of the modern history of Indochina." · Choice "... in this absorbing study, Martin Shipway examines one of France's most catastrophic colonial miscalculations." · Modern and Contemporary France "... Well researched, clearly written and solidly argued, this study poses new questions, opens the possibility of larger comparisons ..." · The Journal of Asian Studies
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