Constrained river, constrained choices: seasonal floods and colonial authority in the Red River Delta

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Abstract

This article examines the problem of flooding in colonial Tonkin through two interrelated lenses: the history of disasters as social and political phenomena, and the history of technology and the constraints that shape its use. With a gradient ten times steeper than the Mekong, the Red River (Sông Cái in Vietnamese) is notorious for its huge seasonal fluctuations and violent floods. For centuries, local rulers and cultivators constructed dikes to protect fields and settlements, though breaches and inundations were frequent. French administrators were convinced that they could improve the flooding situation with modern know-how. From the 1890s, colonial engineers carefully studied the river's behavior, examined a range of different schemes to control it, and debated the extent to which the straitjacketing of the river might gradually exacerbate flood risk. Despite their deep-seated misgivings about the problems caused by dikes, they were ultimately forced to work within the parameters of pre-colonial hydraulic works. The result was an intensification of existing dependencies and flood vulnerabilities, which finally came to a head under the combined pressures of extreme weather and war, and which ultimately played an important role in undermining colonial authority in the Red River delta.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-19
JournalInternational Journal of Asian Studies
Early online date21 Jun 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 21 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • colonialism
  • disaster
  • flooding
  • France
  • irrigation
  • Tonkin
  • Vietnam

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