Zachary Tayler
Zachary Tayler, a third-year Ph.D. candidate studying American military history under supervisor Ingo Trauschweizer, was awarded the from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. His dissertation, 鈥淩econciliation and Normalization: The United States and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 1975-1995,鈥 provides a comprehensive overview of the relations between Washington and Hanoi.
The dissertation analyzes these relations during the twenty-year periods between the end of the Vietnam War and the normalization of diplomatic relations between those two countries. The $4,000 Hogan grant will support Tayler鈥檚 enrollment in the University of Wisconsin鈥檚 Intermediate Vietnamese II course this spring, with the goal of acquiring required competency in the language for a future research trip to Vietnam.
鈥淭he success and vitality of my academic career are inherently connected to my ability to read and speak the Vietnamese language,鈥 Tayler said. 鈥淭he next semester is crucial because it will serve as a stepping-stone to allow me to enroll in Advanced Vietnamese I and II the upcoming summer, so receiving this grant is a major help.鈥
Cody Billock
Cody Billock, a fourth-year Ph.D. candidate studying Vietnamese history under supervisor Alec Holcombe, was awarded a $1,000 from the Society for Military History to travel to the 2025 Society for Military History Conference in Mobile, Alabama.
Billock will present a paper 鈥 "The Vi峄噒 C峄檔g鈥檚 Total War: Communist Mass Mobilization in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War" 鈥 which is a piece of his larger dissertation that focuses on the central Vietnamese city of Hu岷 as a case study to examine the complexity and fragmentation of Vietnamese political life during the Vietnamese Civil War (1945-1975).
鈥淭he success of the Vietnamese Communists, or Vi峄噒 C峄檔g, in the Vietnam War (1959-1975) is often attributed to their ability to win the hearts and minds of the South Vietnamese people. Earlier scholarship portrayed the Southern insurgency as a spontaneous movement arising from economic discontent over unequal land distribution,鈥 Billock said of his planned presentation.
鈥淭his narrative, depicting the Vi峄噒 C峄檔g as simple peasants fighting for independence, overlooks the crucial role of the Vietnamese Workers鈥 Party (VWP)," Billock said. "I will utilize newly available documents from the Central Office of the South (COSVN) to reveal that they employed mass mobilization policies to marshal every aspect of 'liberated' areas. These mass mobilization policies amounted to a strategy of 'total war' and were critical to the Party鈥檚 ultimate military triumph in South Vietnam.鈥
Tayler and Billock are both also certificate-seeking students in 帝王会所鈥檚 Contemporary History Institute, and have also been awarded CHI grants for their projects.