8Story
" We have eaten the forest", Georges Condominas in Sar Luk |
Christine Hemmet (curator in the musée du quai Branly), Vo Thi Thuong and Nguyen Van Huy (curators in the Vietnam museum of Ethnology) have created this exhibition which has been presented in Paris from 23 June to 15 December 2006 and in Hanoi from 12 December 2007 to 16 March 2008. |
We have eaten the forest is located in Sar Luk and dated 1948-1949, a place and time in which the lived experience of a young ethnographer became inextricably bound up with a moment in the history of a society, and which also became a significant entry in the history of ethnology.
|
|
Map published in L'exotique est quotidien, Sar Luk, Vietam, Paris, Plon, 1965 |
History was in the making. Sar Luk existed under a dwindling colonial presence; the Indochina War was spreading and the Vietnam War smoldering. Some villagers were infantrymen in the French army, others worked in the plantations. Georges Condominas shared intimately in this history. Born in Vietnam , the son of a non-commissioned officer in the Indochinese Guard and a half-caste mother, he denounced the narrow-mindedness of so many French colonials, and took a stand against the post-colonial wars. He was a signatory of the Manifesto of the 121 during the Algerian War, and censured the American “green berets” in a memorable speech at the American Anthropological Association. The lot of the inhabitants of Sar Luk, caught up in the violence of contemporary history, led him to coin the now classic term “ethnocide”.
Yves Goudineau
Preface, extract from the catalogue “We have eaten the forest…” Georges Condominas in Vietnam, edited by Christine Hemmet, 2006, musée du quai Branly - Actes Sud co-publication |