Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Dystopia as Liberation: Disturbing Femininities in Contemporary Thailand

Harrison, Rachel

Dystopia as Liberation: Disturbing Femininities in Contemporary Thailand Thumbnail


Authors



Abstract

Despite the stereotypical, outsider view of Thailand as a thriving hub of international sex tourism, traditional and local constructions of Thainess instead privilege the position of the ‘good’ Thai woman—a model of sexual propriety, demure physicality and aesthetic perfection. This is the image of femininity that is heralded by Thailand's Tourist Authority and by government agencies alike as a marketable symbol of cultural refinement and national pride. But this disturbing ‘utopian’ construction of femininity might for some be considered a dystopia shaped by forms of power centred on elite urban rule. In mainstream definitions of Thainess, the monstrous and grotesque inverses of ‘good’ womanhood are located in the ‘dystopian’ visions of rural-based folk traditions that abound with malevolent female spirits and demons, and in the contemporary Thai horror films that draw on these tropes. Adopted by Thai feminists and by street protestors in Bangkok at times of recent political unrest, portrayals of a ‘monstrous-feminine’ have been adopted as central to a carnivalesque strategy of response and resistance to elite discourses of control. Such forces serve to symbolically disturb and destabilise middle-class constructions of a Utopian vision of Thainess with Bangkok as its cultural core. This paper examines instances of how and why the counter-strategy of primitivism and monstrosity has developed, and the extent to which it translates ‘dystopian’ expressions of female sexuality in new imaginaries of ‘dystopia’ as a space of liberation from stultifying cultural and political norms.

Citation

Harrison, R. (2017). Dystopia as Liberation: Disturbing Femininities in Contemporary Thailand. Feminist Review, 116(1), 64-83. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41305-017-0070-y

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 11, 2017
Online Publication Date Oct 13, 2017
Publication Date Oct 13, 2017
Deposit Date Jul 7, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 7, 2017
Journal Feminist Review
Print ISSN 0141-7789
Electronic ISSN 1466-4380
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 116
Issue 1
Pages 64-83
DOI https://doi.org/10.1057/s41305-017-0070-y
Keywords Thai cinema, Thai culture, Thai politics, horror films, monstrous-feminine, Yingluck Shinawatra, Kham Phaka

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations