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ID177971
Title ProperDynamite, Opium, and a Transnational Shadow Economy at Tonkinese Coal Mines
LanguageENG
AuthorNGUYEN, THUY LINH
Summary / Abstract (Note)The rise of the coal-mining industry in colonial Vietnam has often been associated with the French economic presence and their drastic methods of exploitation. But, beyond the confines of French mining enterprises, coal mining gave rise to transnational economic links, fuelled clandestine economic activities, and bound communities across the Chinese–Vietnamese borderland. Drawing from business and police records located at the Vietnamese national archives including those of the Société Francaise des Charbonnages du Tonkin (SFCT)—the largest French coal-mining company in Indochina, this article reveals a thriving, complex, and intersected world of criminal activities involving the theft and trafficking of explosives and opium at Tonkinese coal mines. An investigation into the patterns of these crimes and their perpetrators exposes a transnational shadow economy that managed to stay under the radar of both the French surveillance system and the Vietnamese nationalist movement. Breaking away from the metropole–colony paradigm in colonial historiography, this blended history of labour and crime provides a new lens through which to explore the dynamics of colonial rule and the interplay of the local and the global, as well as the creation of new and important inter-Asian networks.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 54, No.6; Nov 2020: p.1876 - 1904
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2020-12 54, 6
Key WordsDynamite ;  Transnational Shadow Economy ;  Tonkinese Coal Mines