Christopher E. Goscha (born 1965) is an American-Canadian historian specializing in the history of the Cold War in Asia, decolonization, and the wars for Vietnam. He teaches the history of international relations, the Vietnam Wars, and world history at the Université du Québec àMontréal (UQAM). He is a member of the Royal Society of Canada since 2019.
Goscha was born in 1965 in Kansas, the United States.
In 1987, he received his undergraduate degree at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington D.C., United States. In 1992, he obtained his Master's degree in Southeast Asian history at the Australian National University in Canberra. He obtained a second Master's degree in 1994 at the Université de Paris VII in France.
He spent several years in Thailand and Vietnam where he studied Thai and Vietnamese.
In 2000, he defended his PhD at the ÃÂcole Pratique des Hautes ÃÂtudes (IV Section, Historical and Philological Sciences). His thesis, entitled "The Asian Context of the Franco-Vietnamese War: Networks, Relations and Economy (1945-1954)", examined the Indochina War from a transnational perspective. Since 2005, he has lived and worked in Canada where he is a citizen.
He joined the History Department at UQÃÂM in 2005 where he teaches the history of international relations, the Vietnam War, and world history.
His main research topics and courses focus on the history of the wars in Vietnam, international relations, the Cold War, world history, and comparative decolonization.
Since 1995, he has published and edited a dozen books. In 2012, hisàHistorical Dictionary of the Indochina War (1945âÂÂ1954): An International and Interdisciplinary Approach was included in the prestigious list of Outstanding Academic Titles 2012 compiled by the American magazine Choice. It is the first thematic multidisciplinary dictionary on the Indochina War. Goscha is supervisor of the On-Line Resource Site on the Indochina War at the UQÃÂM. He is also co-editor of the eight-volume series From Indochina to Vietnam: Revolution and War in a Global Perspective, published by University of California Press.
In his bookàGoing Indochinese: Contesting Concepts of Space and Place in French Indochina (University of HawaâÂÂii Press, 2012), he questions the concept ofàFrench Indochinaàby analyzing the interactions among Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians and shows how a range of Vietnamese nationalists imagined the future of their nation in Indochinese terms.
He published in 2016, The Penguin History of Vietnamà(Penguin/Random House, 2016),àVietnam: A New Historyà(Basic Books, 2016, American version of the preceding book). This history of Vietnam was the winner of the 2017 John K. Fairbank Prize â American Historical Association, and finalist for the Cundill History Prize.