Yearly Archives: 2012

Can You Spare (at least) a Dollar to help diaCRITICS and DVAN?

Do you like reading diaCRITICS? Is it worth $1 to you? Then please read on about how to donate and help keep diaCRITICS and...

Jade Hidle: Olympic Silver Medalist Marcel Nguyen, and Me

Go Marcel Nguyen! diaCRITIC Jade Hidle gives us an Olympic take on Vietnamese identity using Marcel Nguyen, the Olympic silver medalist in gymnastics, as...

On Thích Quảng Đức, Bà Đặng Thị Kim Liêng, and Self-Immolation

diaCRITICS managing editor Julie Thi Underhill comments upon the practice of self-immolation and the political suicide of Tạ Phong Tần's mother, Bà Đặng Thị Kim Liêng, before...

A Coming-Out Party in Hanoi

We recently reported that Viet Nam's government is now considering whether to allow same-sex couples to marry or legally register and receive rights, positioning Viet Nam...

Same-Sex Marriage Rights in Viet Nam—The Conversation Begins

In recent years, diaCRITICS has seen the debates regarding gay marriage take center stage not only in the United States but also in Europe,...

diaCRITICIZE: this is my rifle, this is my gun…

Stanley Kubrick satirized the unconscious psychosexual energies behind wielding a gun in Full Metal Jacket, when Marine recruits parade with their weapons doing this chant of "This is my rifle, this is my gun, this is for fighting, this is for fun." They seize their crotches at "gun" and "fun." 

On Anger, Rage, and Outrage

Poet Barbara Jane Reyes responds to diaCRITICS editor Viet Thanh Nguyen's diaCRITICIZE post on the use of rage and anger through the life and...

Hoangmai Pham’s ‘Day, Night, Week, Month’

The following memoir essay is by Hoangmai Pham, who escaped from Saigon to the U.S. with her family in 1975, at age seven. Keeper of...

Hoangmai Pham’s ‘Running Saigon’

The following memoir essay is by Hoangmai Pham, who escaped from Saigon to the U.S. with her family in 1975, at age seven. Keeper...

My Living, Yet Lost, Father

diaCRITICS is happy to reprint Kyanh Tonnu's piece "My Living, Yet Lost, Father." In elegant, reflective prose, Tonnu chronicles her journey from Saigon to...