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Hanoi region craft villages star in beautiful new book
The publication of a traveller’s guide to dozens
of craft villages near Hanoi is welcome news for expat residents of the capital
city.
Before it’s too late, hurry to snag your copy of the first edition of a
magnificent new book on the traditional industries of the Red River Delta. Two
years in writing and production, and based on several more years of research by
Dr. Sylvie Fanchette of the Institute de Recherche pour le Développement’s
office in Hanoi, Discovering Craft Villages in Vietnam is a handsomely
illustrated guide to ten one-day itineraries in the outskirts of the capital.
Vietnam’s ‘craft villages,’ centers of handicrafts organized on a
quasi-industrial scale, have existed for hundreds of years and – if they
continue to adapt successfully to the demands of the modern marketplace – may
thrive for many years to come. There are about 1000 craft villages in the Red
River Delta alone, producing ceramics, textiles, bamboo and horn utensils,
furniture, paper, lacquerware, mother of pearl inlays, gold leaf – the list is
long.
Fanchette, a human geographer, and her collaborator, writer Nicolas Stedman,
make several dozen of these villages come alive for us, whether we browse the
book in a comfortable armchair or, as the authors intended, we leap onto a
motorcycle and go to visit the craftsmen.
“We aimed for a book that tells a lot more than a Lonely Planet guide, but is as
easy to use, rather than for an academic tome,” the two explain. And they have
succeeded – the directions and accompanying maps are excellent, certainly
adequate to support a non-Vietnamese speaker’s solo foray into the countryside.
Discovering Craft Villages in Vietnam is a ‘good read.’ Fanchette and Stedman
write with authority and a bit of humor, detailing the craft techniques and
illuminating the heritage and contemporary life of the people of these villages.
Their book has been published in French, English and Vietnamese by the The Gioi
Publishing House, but in only 500 copies each! A second edition is planned.
At 300,000 dong for the French and English versions, and only 200,000 dong for
the Vietnamese version, the current edition is a real bargain. That’s because it
was generously subsidized by a number of organizations. Copies are available at
six bookstores in Hanoi, including the The Gioi store on Tran Hung Dao, and four
in HCM City. They won’t last.
Sylvie Fanchette and Nicholas Stedman will talk about and show photos detailing
the making of their book at the Goethe Institute, 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc in Hanoi
at 6 pm on Tuesday, 22 September.
Source: David Brown |
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