Various information sources displayed throughout the course used different rhetorical strategies to show Vietnam's gender, class, race, and identity. Each source explains the above in different ways, so the reader can understand the strengths and weaknesses of each source when covering one side of Vietnam. In the novel "Unknown Novel", Duong Thu Huong tells a novel from the perspective of North Vietnam. The content of this novel is not content of textbooks but contrasting.
Duong Thu Huong was born in Thai Binh in Vietnam in 1942 and is the daughter of Duong Dinh Chau of the North Vietnamese officer who fought in the guerrillas of the French and Communist Party in the 1950s. Duong Thu Huong's mother is elementary school teacher Ngo Thuy Cham. Duong grew up in poverty and was well hungry when he was a child. She went to Hanoi's art school and studied music, dancing and painting. At the present moment she has no special interest in literature, it did not become a wish of a writer. In 1968, during the Vietnam War (1959 - 1975), Duong volunteered to lead the artistic teams who ran and performed for the Communist Youth Brigade, North Vietnamese Army. She held this position for the next seven years until the end of the war against Saigon in 1975. When she was in Saigon she read some of the world's great novelists including Balzac, Gustav Flaubert and Tolstoy.
Duong Thu Huong is one of the most popular writers in Vietnam. Born in 1947, she volunteered to lead the Communist Youth Brigade during the Vietnam War to the front. During the Chinese attack against Vietnam in 1979, she also became the first female fighter to record disputes at the forefront. As a claim to human rights and democratic political reform, Duong Thu Huong was expelled from the Vietnamese Communist Party in 1989 and was imprisoned without trial in 1991 for his political beliefs. "Blind paradise" is her fourth novel and the fourth novel and is virtually prohibited by the Vietnamese government. She is also the author of an unnamed novel nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literature Award. Duong Thu Huong is not allowed to leave Vietnam. She lives in Hanoi and writes