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Problematic Progress: Reading Environmental and Social Change in the Mekong Delta

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2003

David Biggs
Affiliation:
The Department of History, University of Washington. dbiggs@u.washington.edu

Abstract

Colonial engineers and administrators often referred to the pre-colonial Mekong Delta landscape as a vast solitude yet to be reorganised through their hydraulic technology. However, the environmental history of the Delta's waterways is more complex, suggesting that colonial projects were to some extent embedded within an existing infrastructure. This problematises the rhetorical concept of Progress within a colonial context and its value as a metaphor to understand human changes to the landscape.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© 2003 The National University of Singapore

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