7.08.2026

Vietnamese Books and Magazines at Cornell University: An Exhaustive Listing

Curator: Claude Sonnet.

Editor: Học Trò.


Library Research · Southeast Asia Collections

Pre-1975 and overseas Vietnamese-language materials held in the John M. Echols Collection on Southeast Asia, Cornell University Library.

The Short Answer

Cornell University holds the largest collection of Vietnamese-language print materials outside of Vietnam — and, by most library-science accounts, the second-largest Vietnamese studies collection at any library in the world after the National Library of Vietnam itself. As of a 2011 count by the collection's curator, Gregory Green, the Vietnam collection alone held 72,099 items: 60,607 books, 8,210 serial publications (magazines, journals, newspapers), and 2,263 audiovisual items. The collection has continued to grow since.

There is no single browsable "Vietnamese shelf" — the material is distributed across Cornell's general catalog, a dedicated newspaper microfilm archive, the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections (RMC), and several digitized/digital-collection projects. What follows is organized by where the material actually lives, with direct links wherever Cornell or a partner institution has made a page publicly viewable.

1. The Home Collection: John M. Echols Collection on Southeast Asia

History. The collection began under Cornell's Southeast Asia Program (founded 1950) as part of a national-level agreement that Cornell would acquire a copy of every publication of research value produced in Southeast Asia. It was named in 1977 for John M. Echols. The person most responsible for its growth over three decades was Giok Po Oey (1922–2010), Southeast Asia bibliographer from 1957 to the mid-1980s; he singled out acquiring materials from North Vietnam during the war — including a periodical called Viet-Nam Fatherland Front — as among his proudest achievements. Cornell's own exhibition on his career: Building a Collection: Giok Po Oey and the John M. Echols Collection.

Size over time. By 1982 Vietnamese-language books alone stood at roughly 14,700 volumes. By 2011 the Vietnam collection had grown to 72,099 items. Cornell adds more than 9,000 volumes a year across the full Echols Collection.

Access. Most items are searchable in the main catalog and open to any visiting researcher, not just Cornell affiliates. The Vietnam War subject-browsing range alone is DS 557–DS 559, roughly 11,000 catalogued items; less-used material sits at the Library Annex with next-day retrieval.

2. Vietnamese Newspapers (Pre-1975 and War-Era)

Cornell's newspaper holdings are its single most distinctive Vietnamese asset. See the Cornell Chronicle account of the preservation project (2005).

Scope: roughly 120 local and national Vietnamese newspaper titles from the Indochina/Vietnam War period (late 1950s–1975), plus 60-plus Vietnamese-language periodicals from the same era. Wartime newsprint was disintegrating acidic paper, so Cornell has microfilmed more than 70 titles and recycled the originals once filmed.

Date range: primarily 1960–1975, with some runs back to 1951 and others (especially official/Party papers) continuing into the 1980s and beyond.

Named examples surviving on Cornell microfilm: Quốc Gia (government-aligned), Nắng Thép, Sinh Viên (student paper), Việt Chiến (Buddhist weekly), Công Lý, Tiền Phong (Hanoi, filmed 1975–2003), Quân Đội Nhân Dân (Hanoi army paper, filmed 1981–2004).

Partnerships: filming is done under the Southeast Asia Microform Project (SEAM), established 1970 and administered by the Center for Research Libraries (CRL) in Chicago; Cornell also partners with the Library of Congress to combine incomplete runs into single complete runs. SEAM film is available for interlibrary loan to any CRL member — search CRL's own catalog.

Bibliographic key to the whole newspaper landscape: Mục-lục báo-chí Việt-ngữ 1865–1965, a bibliography of known Vietnamese-language newspapers 1865–1965, call number (SEA) Z6958 V5 V665+, Asia Reference.

Project staff: Carole Atkinson (Asia Collections public-services assistant) and Yen Bui (Vietnamese-publications cataloger).

3. Vietnamese Periodicals and Magazines with Individually Catalogued Records

A representative sample — not a complete list (the full run is in the hundreds):

TitleDescriptionCornell Call Number
VietnamFrench-language magazine, Hanoi, 1959–1979DS 531 V622 ++ (Annex)
Vietnamese StudiesHanoi quarterly, begun 1964DS 531 V6282
Thời-báo GàOverseas Vietnamese-community periodical, Cambridge MA, 1969–1975DS 531 T4 + (Annex)
Vietnam GenerationEnglish-language scholarly journal, v.3–5, 1991–93Record 3804498
Viet Nam War Generation Journalv.1–2, 2001/2–2002/3DS557 .V54
Nam MagazineNov. 2002 – Aug./Sept. 2004DS559.5 .N36 +
The VVA VeteranVietnam Veterans of America; print from 1994, online from 2012DS559.73.U6 V99 ++
The ObserverNews for the American Soldier in Vietnam, 1962–1973Record 8755422

Thời-báo Gà is worth flagging specifically: the one individually documented overseas/diaspora Vietnamese periodical (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1969–1975) that surfaced directly in Cornell's own subject guide.

4. Reference Works: Dictionaries, Encyclopedias, and Bibliographies

This section and the two after it draw on a detailed inventory published by Vietnamese-Canadian librarian Lâm Vĩnh Thế in the journal Dòng Sử Việt (issues 2–3, 2007), "Tài Liệu Việt Học Tại Đại Học Cornell." Surviving copy of Parts I–II: petruskyaus.net. (Part III, on rare Vietnam War/VNCH materials, was published in print but is not confirmed to survive online — see the Process document.)

Encyclopedic dictionaries: Historical Dictionary of Vietnam (Duiker 1998; Lockhart & Duiker 3rd ed. 2006); Từ Điển Bách Khoa Việt Nam, 4 vols., 2000–2005; Việt Nam Bách Khoa Từ Điển (Đào Đăng Vỹ et al., 1960).

Vietnamese-language dictionaries (107+ monolingual titles) plus bilingual holdings: Việt-Anh (110 vols.), Việt-Pháp (67), Việt-Hoa (27), Việt-Latin (11), and more. Named examples: Từ điển tiếng Huế (Bùi Minh Đức, 2005); Tầm nguyên từ điển (Bửu Kế, 1968); Việt ngữ chánh tả tự vị (Lê Ngọc Trụ, 1972); Tự điển Việt Nam, 2 vols. (Lê Văn Đức et al., 1970); Đồng âm tự vị (Nguyễn Văn Mai, 1925); Từ điển tiếng Việt (ed. Hoàng Phê, 2002).

Bibliographies and periodical indexes: Bibliography of Periodicals Published in Viet Nam (Nguyễn Xuân Đạo & Gardner, 1958); Vietnam: A Comprehensive Bibliography (Chen, 1973); Vietnam: A Guide to Reference Sources (Cotter, 1977); Guide de recherches sur le Vietnam (1983); Bibliographie vietnamienne, 2 vols. (1975–1982); An Annotated Index of the Journals Văn Sử Địa and Nghiên Cứu Lịch Sử (1984); Hanoi National Library's Thư mục các bài đăng báo and ...tạp chí series.

Most usefully public: Vietnam War Bibliography: Selected from Cornell University's Echols Collection (Sugnet & Hickey, Lexington Books, 1983, 572 pp.), freely readable via the Internet Archive: archive.org/details/vietnamwarbiblio0000sugn. This is the single best public gateway into Cornell's Vietnam War holdings without visiting Ithaca.

5. Republic of Vietnam (VNCH) Government Publications, 1955–1975

Cornell's stated special strength is a near-complete run of official South Vietnamese government publications — well over 200 individual titles across three periods (First Republic 1955–63; the interval 1963–67; Second Republic 1967–75). Representative examples by ministry:

General government / presidency: Công báo Việt Nam Cộng Hòa (Official Gazette, continuous from 1955; microfilm Film 2254 covers 1959–1968 and 1968–1974); Hiến pháp / Constitution of the Republic of Vietnam (1956, 1967, 1969); Seven Years of the Ngô Đình Diệm Administration (1961, 567 pp.).

Land Reform: Chính sách cải cách điền địa; National Land Reform Conference records (1959, 1960); Luật Người Cày Có Ruộng (the 1970 "Land to the Tiller" law).

Justice: Luật dân sự tố tụng Việt Nam (1962, 787 pp.); Pháp lý tập san (Legal Journal, 1948–1974).

Information / Press Law: The New Vietnam Press Law (1970/71); Le nouveau code de la presse (1970); Quy chế báo chí (1969).

Also represented: Ministries of War Veterans, Health, Labor, Education, Rural Construction/Development, and Foreign Affairs (32 international treaties, 1950–1970), down to hamlet-level case studies like Ấp Đặng Dung (1969).

Ministry-published journals: Hành chánh khảo luận (Interior, 1958–1960); Chí trai (Youth, 1965); Xã hội (Social Affairs, 1964–1966); Nông thôn mới (Rural Construction, 1970–1974).

Language breakdown of a 202-item VNCH sample: Vietnamese 63.86% (129 items), French 18.32% (37), English 17.82% (36) — reflecting simultaneous multilingual publication aimed at international audiences.

6. Rare and Manuscript Collections (Archival, Not Circulating)

Full browse list: rmc.library.cornell.edu — Southeast Asia finding aids

CollectionDatesContentsFinding Aid
Hartmann Collection on Indochinaca. 1900–19707.5 cu. ft.; photographs, magazine illustrations, printed articles on Vietnam; Saigon/Huế material, 1967 Vietnamese high-school syllabiRMM04298
Indochinese Postcardsca. 1902–1994Postcards, primarily Vietnamese scenesRMM04279
International War Crimes Tribunal records1967, 1970Reports on alleged U.S. war crimes in South VietnamRMM04285
Donald Kirk papersca. 1965–1987Journalist's papers on the Vietnam WarRMM04355
Robert R. Nathan papers1943–1975Consulting travel diaries incl. VietnamRMM04410
Basil Rauch Vietnam documentation1942–1980Origins of the post-WWII Indochina conflictRMM04381
Vietnam War: Statistical Analysis and Evaluation Projects1968–1972U.S. automated war-data systemsRMM04406

A born-digital sibling: "Cornell Vietnam War Protest: Images from the Rare Book and Manuscript Collections" — a digitized set of campus protest-era photographs (catalog record ss:2574368, reachable via digital.library.cornell.edu).

7. Digital and Digitized Collections

Cornell University Library Digital Collections (umbrella portal): digital.library.cornell.edu

Southeast Asia Visions (digital.library.cornell.edu/collections/seasiavisions): 350+ digitized pre-modern European and American travel accounts of Southeast Asia (1550s–1920s). Caveat: despite its Echols Collection provenance, this is English/French travel writing about the region, not Vietnamese-authored books or magazines — easy to mistake for a Vietnamese digital archive, but it is not one.

Global Press Archive (subscription database): reported 17 titles of digitized Vietnamese newspapers spanning 1839–1976, distinct from Cornell's own microfilm-only holdings.

No dedicated, publicly browsable "Vietnamese Books Digital Library" yet exists at Cornell; most pre-1975 Vietnamese-language material remains accessible only via microfilm/physical visit or interlibrary loan through CRL/SEAM.

8. Overseas / Diaspora Vietnamese Materials — What Could and Couldn't Be Confirmed

The prompt specifically asked about material "from Vietnamese overseas." An honest accounting:

  • Confirmed: Thời-báo Gà (Cambridge, MA, 1969–1975), an early Vietnamese-American community periodical, individually catalogued at Cornell.
  • Confirmed: Vietnamese acquisitions did not stop in 1975; the collection grew from ~14,700 Vietnamese books (1982) to 60,000+ books and 8,000+ serials (2011), including post-1975 and diaspora material.
  • Not confirmed / likely does not exist as a named sub-collection: a dedicated "Overseas Vietnamese periodicals" archive comparable to UC Berkeley's Đỗ Đình Tuấn (Do Dinh Tuan) Collection of Vietnamese Periodicals, built specifically around post-1975 diaspora publications from California, elsewhere in North America, and Australia. That collection is at Berkeley, not Cornell — finding aid via the Online Archive of California. If the interest is specifically post-1975 émigré press, Berkeley may be the more specialized destination.
  • Cornell's public-facing material is weighted toward pre-1975 VNCH-era and North Vietnamese wartime holdings rather than post-1975 diaspora publications — likely reflecting what Cornell is best known for rather than an actual gap (the 8,210-serials figure suggests real periodical depth no public source breaks down title-by-title).

9. How to Search Cornell's Holdings Yourself