TY - BOOK AU - Keith,Charles TI - Catholic Vietnam: a church from empire to nation T2 - From Indochina to Vietnam SN - 9780520272477 AV - BX1650.A7 K45 2012 U1 - 282/.597 23 PY - 2012/// CY - Berkeley PB - University of California Press KW - Catholic Church KW - Vietnam KW - History KW - Church history N1 - Originally presented as the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--Yale University, 2008; Includes bibliographical references and index; A church between the Nguyẽ̂n and the French -- A colonial church divided -- The birth of a national church -- Vietnamese Catholic tradition on trial -- A national church experienced -- The culture and politics of Vietnamese Catholic nationalism -- A national church in revolution and war -- Epilogue : a national church divided N2 - "Charles Keith explores the complex position of the Catholic Church in modern Vietnamese history. By demonstrating how French colonial rule allowed for the transformation of Catholic missions in Vietnam into broad and powerful economic and institutional structures, Keith discovers the ways race defined ecclesiastical and cultural prestige and control of resources and institutional authority. This, along with colonial rule itself, created a culture of religious life in which relationships between Vietnamese Catholics and European missionaries were less equal and more fractious than ever before. However, the colonial era also brought unprecedented ties between Vietnam and the transnational institutions and culture of global Catholicism, as Vatican reforms to create an independent national Church helped Vietnamese Catholics to reimagine and redefine their relationships to both missionary Catholicism and to colonial rule itself. Much like the myriad revolutionary ideologies and struggles in the name of the Vietnamese nation, this revolution in Vietnamese Catholic life was ultimately ambiguous, even contradictory: it established the foundations for an independent national Church, but it also polarized the place of the new Church in post-colonial Vietnamese politics and society and produced deep divisions between Vietnamese Catholics themselves."--Publisher's description ER -