Full Description
Vietnam has been transformed over the past quarter of a century by massive industrialization and urbanization that followed macro-economic reforms introduced from the late 1980s.
This volume explores the social consequences of this change by delving into the lives and aspirations of young women graduates who have come to Ho Chi Minh City in search of success in the city's growing graduate labour market. They are part of Vietnam's new middle class, an educated and affluent segment of society growing with the rapid urbanization of Vietnam's major cities.
This rich, person-centred ethnography argues that the country's mega-urban Southeast region enables young women, so long as they remain single, to realize aspirations for betterment that affect not only their own lives, but those of their families and communities who remain in rural Vietnam. It thus highlights the important social role of remittances and the salience of kinship during periods of social transformation.
The volume concludes with a wide-ranging look at the emergence of middle classes in Pacific Asia in order to locate the Vietnamese new middle class within a globalizing context.
Contents
Acknowledgements vii 1. Middle classes in post-reform Ho Chi Minh City 1 2. Urban middle classes in postcolonial Saigon 49 3. Living in twenty-first century Ho Chi Minh City 87 4. Lifestyles of professional work 109 5. New middle-class leisure culture 135 6. Social mobility in a multi-dimensional family 172 7. Delaying and desiring marriage 209 8. Conclusion 240 References 271 Index 302



