ID :
81355
Thu, 09/24/2009 - 07:09
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/81355
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book on vietnamese craft presented on sept 22
Hanoi (VNA) – A new book on Vietnamese craft villages by Sylvie Fanchette and Nicholas Stedman was presented on Sept. 22 at the Goethe Institute in Hanoi.
The book, Discovering Craft Villages in Vietnam : Ten Itineraries around Hanoi
, is a remarkable collection of writings on the vibrant communities surrounding
the capital.
Spending several years working in Vietnam , the authors visited various craft
villages to learn more about the crafts, the people, traditions and heritage of
the villages. What they bring to the book is illustrated by photographer Francois
Carlet-Soulages.
The book, the fruit of several years’ research, proposes 10 itineraries,
blending potted histories, legends, descriptions of craft techniques, guided
walks and maps, all designed to introduce readers to more than 40 craft villages
located in Hanoi , Bac Giang and Bac Ninh provinces. Many of these are little
known to outsiders, but none are very far from the capital.
The villages around Hanoi possess a rich cultural, architectural and craft
heritage. Less than an hour’s journey from the capital are more than 500
specialist craft villages, producing an array of religious and artistic objects,
as well as food products, industrial goods, textiles, basketwork and much more.
These traditions have survived many vicissitudes. Today, they constitute the
basis of material, social and spiritual culture among the village communities of
the Hong (Red) River Delta.
The artisans themselves and their local institutions perceive cultural tourism as
a way of further improving the fortunes of craft village communities.
“They also see it as an opportunity to attract wider attention to their
heritage but, until recently, few guides or tourists ventured into these
villages, some of which are lost beyond a maze or poorly signposted roads and
tracks amid the rice paddies of Hanoi ’s hinterland,” the authors write.
The 300-page book published by the The Gioi (World) Publishing House costs
200,000 VND (11.2 USD) for the Vietnamese edition and 16.7 USD for the English
and French versions.
The book’s publishing was sponsored by the Research Institute for Development,
the Ford Foundation, French Development Agency, French Culture Centre in Vietnam
, Wallonia-Brusssels Delegation to Hanoi and Hermes Group.-Enditem.
The book, Discovering Craft Villages in Vietnam : Ten Itineraries around Hanoi
, is a remarkable collection of writings on the vibrant communities surrounding
the capital.
Spending several years working in Vietnam , the authors visited various craft
villages to learn more about the crafts, the people, traditions and heritage of
the villages. What they bring to the book is illustrated by photographer Francois
Carlet-Soulages.
The book, the fruit of several years’ research, proposes 10 itineraries,
blending potted histories, legends, descriptions of craft techniques, guided
walks and maps, all designed to introduce readers to more than 40 craft villages
located in Hanoi , Bac Giang and Bac Ninh provinces. Many of these are little
known to outsiders, but none are very far from the capital.
The villages around Hanoi possess a rich cultural, architectural and craft
heritage. Less than an hour’s journey from the capital are more than 500
specialist craft villages, producing an array of religious and artistic objects,
as well as food products, industrial goods, textiles, basketwork and much more.
These traditions have survived many vicissitudes. Today, they constitute the
basis of material, social and spiritual culture among the village communities of
the Hong (Red) River Delta.
The artisans themselves and their local institutions perceive cultural tourism as
a way of further improving the fortunes of craft village communities.
“They also see it as an opportunity to attract wider attention to their
heritage but, until recently, few guides or tourists ventured into these
villages, some of which are lost beyond a maze or poorly signposted roads and
tracks amid the rice paddies of Hanoi ’s hinterland,” the authors write.
The 300-page book published by the The Gioi (World) Publishing House costs
200,000 VND (11.2 USD) for the Vietnamese edition and 16.7 USD for the English
and French versions.
The book’s publishing was sponsored by the Research Institute for Development,
the Ford Foundation, French Development Agency, French Culture Centre in Vietnam
, Wallonia-Brusssels Delegation to Hanoi and Hermes Group.-Enditem.