La guerre géographique sous les tropiques: Yves Lacoste et la guerre du Vietnam

TranHung

TY - JOUR

T1 - La guerre géographique sous les tropiques

T2 - Yves Lacoste et la guerre du Vietnam

AU - Bowd, Gavin Philip

AU - Clayton, Dan

PY - 2022/3/4

Y1 - 2022/3/4

N2 - Translated by Marie Van Effenterre La version originale de ce texte a été publiée en 2013 en anglais sous le titre « Geographical Warfare in the Tropics: Yves Lacoste and the Vietnam War », Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 103, n° 3. Elle est disponible sur Jstor : https://www.jstor.org/stable/23485409 Remaniement du texte après traduction : Stéphane Rosière. This article tells a three-layered story. First, it reexamines the impact of French geographer Yves Lacoste’s 1972 exposé on the American bombing of the Red River Delta of North Vietnam on opposition to the Vietnam War and how it was implicated in wider political debate about what Hannah Arendt saw as systemic “lying in politics.” In various reports and newspaper articles Lacoste deployed the tools of classical geography—firsthand observation, mapping, and the integrated analysis of physical and human factors—to disclose connections among law, war, and environment (or what he termed “geographical warfare”) that had a troubling political significance. Second, we explore how Lacoste’s exposé was bound up with the theme of “tropicality” (the West’s construction of “the tropics” as its environmental other), chiefly through his recourse to Gourou’s study (1936) of the delta. Lacoste showed how exotic imagery of the tropics has served as a means of opposition and critique as well as a mode of othering and Western dominance. Third, Lacoste’s critical engagement with Gourou points to the ambivalent critical impact that the Vietnam War had on Francophone and Anglophone geography during the 1970s and 1980s, yet also how interest in the idea of tropicality developed in French geography twenty years before the better known Anglophone critical literature on the subject emerged.

AB - Translated by Marie Van Effenterre La version originale de ce texte a été publiée en 2013 en anglais sous le titre « Geographical Warfare in the Tropics: Yves Lacoste and the Vietnam War », Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 103, n° 3. Elle est disponible sur Jstor : https://www.jstor.org/stable/23485409 Remaniement du texte après traduction : Stéphane Rosière. This article tells a three-layered story. First, it reexamines the impact of French geographer Yves Lacoste’s 1972 exposé on the American bombing of the Red River Delta of North Vietnam on opposition to the Vietnam War and how it was implicated in wider political debate about what Hannah Arendt saw as systemic “lying in politics.” In various reports and newspaper articles Lacoste deployed the tools of classical geography—firsthand observation, mapping, and the integrated analysis of physical and human factors—to disclose connections among law, war, and environment (or what he termed “geographical warfare”) that had a troubling political significance. Second, we explore how Lacoste’s exposé was bound up with the theme of “tropicality” (the West’s construction of “the tropics” as its environmental other), chiefly through his recourse to Gourou’s study (1936) of the delta. Lacoste showed how exotic imagery of the tropics has served as a means of opposition and critique as well as a mode of othering and Western dominance. Third, Lacoste’s critical engagement with Gourou points to the ambivalent critical impact that the Vietnam War had on Francophone and Anglophone geography during the 1970s and 1980s, yet also how interest in the idea of tropicality developed in French geography twenty years before the better known Anglophone critical literature on the subject emerged.

KW - War

KW - Geographical warfare

KW - Guru (Pierre)

KW - Lacoste (Yves)

KW - Tropicality

KW - Vietnam War

U2 - 10.4000/espacepolitique.9491

DO - 10.4000/espacepolitique.9491

M3 - Article

SN - 1958-5500

VL - 43

JO - L'Espace Politique

JF - L'Espace Politique

IS - 1

ER -