A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty

This paper adopts the ontological security perspective, which maintains that states seek coherence and continuity in their self-perceptions and actions, to investigate the Vietnamese state self-identity. The 1986 Đổi Mới (Renovation) reforms’ embrace of global reintegration and conciliation with for...

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Main Author: To, Minh Son
Other Authors: -
Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157161
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author To, Minh Son
author2 -
author_facet -
To, Minh Son
author_sort To, Minh Son
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description This paper adopts the ontological security perspective, which maintains that states seek coherence and continuity in their self-perceptions and actions, to investigate the Vietnamese state self-identity. The 1986 Đổi Mới (Renovation) reforms’ embrace of global reintegration and conciliation with former foes, China and the U.S., necessitate rearticulations of Vietnam’s anticolonial legacies and socialist ideology. This paper develops a discursive account of ontological security grounded in Lacanian and postcolonial insights. It argues that states undergo constant but contingent state-making projects because they are never truly ontologically secured. Postcolonial states are fundamentally constituted by this (Lacanian) lack upon their colonization and so desires an idealized sovereign statehood. Ontological security can be contingently attained with a hegemonic discourse of sovereignty that institutes a Self against a threatening Other and a master narrative to absorb political demands and preclude alternatives to the current state. The Vietnamese master discourse of unyielding struggle to unity and independence, with an ultimate, imperialist Other and the Vietnamese, socialist Self, provisionally fulfills this postcolonial desire. The Renovation of Vietnamese ontological security turns its ‘socialism’ towards ‘sovereignty’. The unending ‘transition to socialism’ as a Vietnamese sovereignty discourse maintains internal (U.S.) and external (China) Others, identification with an imagined ‘international community’ for sovereignty legitimation, but ambivalent socialist identification with an idealized Soviet Union and, ineluctably, a ‘brotherly’ socialist China.
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spelling ntu-10356/1571612023-03-05T17:25:38Z A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty To, Minh Son - S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Alan Chong Chia Siong iscschong@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Political science::International relations Humanities::History::Asia::Vietnam This paper adopts the ontological security perspective, which maintains that states seek coherence and continuity in their self-perceptions and actions, to investigate the Vietnamese state self-identity. The 1986 Đổi Mới (Renovation) reforms’ embrace of global reintegration and conciliation with former foes, China and the U.S., necessitate rearticulations of Vietnam’s anticolonial legacies and socialist ideology. This paper develops a discursive account of ontological security grounded in Lacanian and postcolonial insights. It argues that states undergo constant but contingent state-making projects because they are never truly ontologically secured. Postcolonial states are fundamentally constituted by this (Lacanian) lack upon their colonization and so desires an idealized sovereign statehood. Ontological security can be contingently attained with a hegemonic discourse of sovereignty that institutes a Self against a threatening Other and a master narrative to absorb political demands and preclude alternatives to the current state. The Vietnamese master discourse of unyielding struggle to unity and independence, with an ultimate, imperialist Other and the Vietnamese, socialist Self, provisionally fulfills this postcolonial desire. The Renovation of Vietnamese ontological security turns its ‘socialism’ towards ‘sovereignty’. The unending ‘transition to socialism’ as a Vietnamese sovereignty discourse maintains internal (U.S.) and external (China) Others, identification with an imagined ‘international community’ for sovereignty legitimation, but ambivalent socialist identification with an idealized Soviet Union and, ineluctably, a ‘brotherly’ socialist China. Master of Science (Asian Studies) 2022-05-09T13:31:12Z 2022-05-09T13:31:12Z 2022 Thesis-Master by Coursework To, M. S. (2022). A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157161 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157161 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science::International relations
Humanities::History::Asia::Vietnam
To, Minh Son
A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title_full A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title_fullStr A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title_full_unstemmed A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title_short A state of ambivalence: Vietnam's renovation of ontological security and the unending 'transition to socialism' as a discourse of sovereignty
title_sort state of ambivalence vietnam s renovation of ontological security and the unending transition to socialism as a discourse of sovereignty
topic Social sciences::Political science::International relations
Humanities::History::Asia::Vietnam
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157161
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