Skip to main content

Multi-format set / Oral History of Nguyen Dinh Cuong

Have a question about this item?

Summary information.

Title
Oral History of Nguyen Dinh Cuong
Creator
Nguyen, Cuong Dinh
Contributor
Vo Dang, Thuy
Date Created and/or Issued
2012-05-05
Contributing Institution
UC Irvine, Libraries, Southeast Asian Archive
Collection
Viet Stories: Vietnamese American Oral History project
Rights Information
Copyrighted
This material is provided for private study, scholarship, or research. Transmission or reproduction of any material protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Contact the University of California, Irvine Libraries, Special Collections and Archives for more information (spcoll@uci.edu).
Description
Scope/Content: Oral history of Nguyen Dinh Cuong (or Cuong Dinh Nguyen, western-style) who was born in Hanoi in 1942. His family migrated down to Dalat after the Geneva Conference partitioned Vietnam into north and South. Most of his education was attained in Dalat. He became a teacher and met his wife, also a teacher, at a school where he taught. They had a son in 1975 and fled Vietnam by boat in 1977, ending up in a make-shift refugee camp in Taman Muara, Malaysia. They were resettled to Los Angeles County, California where he had a brother already there. He continued his schooling and became a civil engineer, added one more child (daughter) to the family, and settled in Cerritos, California. At the time of interview he is retired and remains active in the Buddhist community as well as alumni associations and on Vietnamese radio.
Scope/Content: Dr. Thuy Vo Dang is a Postdoctoral Fellow and Project Director for the Vietnamese American Oral History Project (VAOHP) in the Department of Asian American Studies at UC Irvine. She earned her Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, San Diego in 2008 and was a Fellow at the Institute of American Cultures/Asian American Studies Center at the University of California, Los Angeles from 2009-2010 and a Visiting Scholar from 2010-2011. Her research and teaching specializations include comparative race and ethnic relations, immigration, ethnography, community studies, and oral history. For her doctoral dissertation on cultural politics and memory, she conducted oral history interviews with first generation Vietnamese Americans in San Diego. She has also collaborated on a Pacific Rim Foundation-funded project, interviewing over 70 Vietnamese Americans in the southern California area. Her academic research has been published in Amerasia Journal, the anthology Le Viet Nam Au Feminin, and Journal of Vietnamese Studies. Dr. Vo Dang currently facilitates and co-hosts a weekly Vietnamese-language radio show called Oral history; stories between the generations on VNCR (FM 106.3).
Scope/Content: Photograph of Nguyen Dinh Cuong, photographer Thuy Vo Dang, 2012
Type
sound
Format
3 mp3 audio files; 1 pdf transcription English; 1pdf transcription Vietnamese; 65 jpg image files
Extent
2:00:46
Identifier
ark:/81235/d8s172
VAOHP0075_P01.jpg
http://hdl.handle.net/10575/3269
Language
English
en
Subject
Acculturation | Boat People | Buddhist | Children | Education | Employment | Engineer | Exile | Family | Family reunification | Geneva Conference | Identity | International student | Marriage | Newspaper or magazine | Radio | Refugee camp (Malaysia) | Resettlement | Student | Teacher | Tradition or custom | Viet Cong | Viet Kieu | Vietnam War | Little Saigon (Orange County, California) | Los Angeles, California | Orange County, California | Da Lat (Vietnam) | Ha Noi (Vietnam)
Time Period
1940-1949
Relation
Thuy Vo Dang Oral Histories

About the collections in Calisphere

Learn more about the collections in Calisphere. View our statement on digital primary resources.

Copyright, permissions, and use

If you're wondering about permissions and what you can do with this item, a good starting point is the "rights information" on this page. See our terms of use for more tips.

Share your story

Has Calisphere helped you advance your research, complete a project, or find something meaningful? We'd love to hear about it; please send us a message.

Explore related content on Calisphere: