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Summary Of Karen Turner's Even The Women Must Fight

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Karen Turner and author’s collaborator, Phan Thanh Haou, in this heartbreaking book, Even the Women Must Fight: Memories of War from North Vietnam, explore the abyss between Vietnamese and Americans cultures and examine the consequences of war in Vietnamese women through several interviews. The author offers an array of women stories with different perspectives, understanding and attempts to understand and leave an open-ended question, why “When war strikes close to home, even women must fight.”
Turner feels these women’s stories sincerely. She is an active participant in these conversations and she is willing to grow with them, as a woman. The author successfully provides enough material for the reader to engage and to have a better understanding …show more content…

For example, Ngo Thi Tuyen, a member to the Communist Party of Vietnam fully embodied the importance toward the national salvation against the American aggressors, she helped shoot down many US aircraft, carried ammunition, rice, filled bomb craters and cook dinner among other things. Nevertheless, Turner remarks how she (Tuyen) has become an object of pity because she has never borne her own children.
Even the women must fight, pay close attention to this divide that tells the reader at least two different stories. One that is somewhat idealized and in which all the struggle, training and losses are seen chiefly as heroic acts, and the other in which Vietnamese women when finally return home, they had to face the reality of a society that gives priority to family …show more content…

They raised the economic potential of the country and increased the people’s resistance power. Women in Vietnam accepted their responsibility of “ taking charge of family affairs in the absence of a husband or son; giving assistance to the fighters at the front and undertaking, if necessary, combat duties. Turner is constantly juxtapositioning the resilience of these women and the emotional internal battle that brings sorrow and pain. For example, the author brings some women stories in which these fighters express the joy they experienced, while in the midst of war when they dreamt returning home after defeating the enemy. In fact, they returned home stronger and capable of dealing without fear to authoritative men, nevertheless, their core values regarding the importance of family didn’t change for them or the Vietnamese society. Many of them after the war were single mothers, not able to have children or they have lost their husbands, and none of these attributes are fully respected in a society that sees motherhood as the most sacred right of

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