Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Vietnam War :: essays research papers
 The very mention of the name Vietnam in the 1960s and '70s  came to signify either a brutal jungle war or a spectacular  failure of American power - or both. Thankfully, the  combined legacies of French occupation, the Vietnam War  and withdrawal of Soviet aid in 1990 have given way to the  Vietnamese citizens' thriving entrepreneurial spirit, fueled by  overseas investment and a relaxing of government control.  And yet, the exotic chime of names and places still remains:  Hue, Dien Bien Phu, the Perfumed River, the Plain of Reeds.  The people are erudite and friendly, the food a delicious  mixture of French and local cuisine's, and the scenery is  sublime. Although Vietnam lies in the intertropical zone, local  conditions vary from frosty winter in the far northern hills to  the year-round subequatorial warmth of the Mekong Delta.  At sea level, the mean annual temperature is about 27  degrees C in the south, falling to about 21 degrees C in the  far north. Because of its wide range of latitudes and altitudes,  there are no good or bad seasons for visiting Vietnam. When  one region is wet, cold or steaming hot, there is always  somewhere else that is pleasantly warm and sunny. Visitors  should take into account the Vietnamese New Year  celebration (Tet) which falls in late January or early February  - flights and accommodation are often fully booked. Four  great philosophies and religions have shaped the spiritual life  of the Vietnamese people: Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism  and Christianity. Over the centuries, Confucianism, Taoism  and Buddhism have melded with popular Chinese beliefs and  ancient Vietnamese animism to form what is known as Tam  Giao (or `Triple Religion'). The Vietnamese language (kinh)  is a hybrid of Mon-Khmer, Tai and Chinese elements with  many of its basic words derived from the monotonic  Mon-Khmer languages. The most widely spoken foreign  languages in Vietnam are Chinese (Cantonese and  Mandarin), English, French and Russian, more or less in that  order. Popular artistic forms include: traditional painting  produced on frame- mounted silk; an eclectic array of  theaters, puppetry, music and dance; religious sculpture; and  lacquerware. Vietnamese cuisine is especially varied - there  are said to be nearly 500 different traditional dishes, ranging  from exotic meats such as bat, cobra and pangolin to  fantastic vegetarian creations (often prepared to replicate  meat and fish dishes). However, the staple of Vietnamese  cuisine is plain white rice dressed up with a plethora of  vegetables, meat, fish, spices and sauces. Spring rolls and  steamed rice pancakes are popular snacks, and the  ubiquitous soups include eel and vermicelli, shredded  chicken and bitter soups. Some of the more unusual fruits  available include green dragon fruit, jujube, khaki, longan,  mangosteen, pomelo, three-seed cherry and water apple.  					    
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