France on the Mekong: A History of the Protectorate in Cambodia, 1863-1953
Author: John A. Tully
Publisher: University Press Of America
Publishing Date: January 20, 2003
Paperback: 592 pages
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0761824316
ISBN-13: 978-0761824312
Format: Paperback
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Book Description
Based on largely unexploited archival sources, France on the Mekong is the first comprehensive history of the colonial era in Cambodia. The book takes as its point of departure Marx's early appraisal of colonialism's "double mission" in Asia. Tully argues that King Norodom's decision to invite in the French in 1863 was a "Faustian bargain" for Cambodia. While the Protectorate did ensure the continued existence of the Cambodian state, and did much to preserve Cambodia's crumbling cultural legacy, the downside was that authoritarian rule was entrenched rather than weakened, and that the country was left seriously underdeveloped when the French left in 1953. Colonialism disturbed the foundations of traditional society, but did not replace them. This was to have disastrous consequences for post-colonial Cambodia-- a point that the author develops at the end of the book.
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