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Thailand in a Larger Universe: The Lingering Consequences of Crypto-Colonialism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 November 2017
Abstract
The present parochialism of Thai studies, although partial, suggests parallels with the situation of Modern Greek studies in the early 1970s. The cultural and political conditions attendant on both in the respective time periods—especially the prudery, emphasis on bourgeois notions of respectability, and restrictions on the scope and content of scholarship—suggest that a comparative framework, already emergent, would benefit both Thailand and Thai studies today. Thailand and Greece both represent conditions of “crypto-colonialism,” in which the combination of adulation and resentment of powerful Western nations produces a distinctive set of attitudes. Important cultural and political consequences flow from this shared condition, as is also contrastively demonstrated by the two countries’ very different recent histories. For example, censorship, once deeply intrusive but now virtually nonexistent in Greece, was instantiated by absent voices and official surveillance at the Thai studies conference at which this article was originally presented. A defensive posture, such censorship exposes an underlying sense of political weakness and cultural embarrassment.
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References
1 This article is based on a keynote address that I delivered on July 16, 2017, at the Thirteenth International Thai Studies Conference in Chiang Mai, Thailand. I am grateful to Jeffrey Wasserstrom and to three anonymous readers for their speedy responses and helpful advice as I faced the task of turning an oral presentation, delivered under tense circumstances, into what I hope is at least a readable text.
2 I write this in early September 2017. At the time of writing, we have no means of knowing how the situation will develop. See, e.g., “Social Scientist Summoned by Police following CMU Academic Event,” The Nation (Bangkok), August 15, 2017, http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30323865 (accessed August 16, 2017); Pravit Rojanaphruck, “Five in Chiang Mai Hear Charges over ‘Not a Barracks’ Banner,” Khao Sod English, August 21, 2017, http://www.khaosodenglish.com/politics/2017/08/21/five-chiang-mai-hear-charges-violating-political-assembly-ban/ (accessed August 21, 2017); “Chiang Mai Organiser Reports to Police, Denies Charges,” Bangkok Post, August 21, 2017, http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/politics/1310491/chiang-mai-forum-organiser-reports-to-police-deny-charges (accessed September 16, 2017). The specific legal device invoked as the basis of the charge is Section 12 of Order No. 3/2015 of the Head of the National Council for Peace and Order and is an instrument created by the present regime.
3 John Draper and Peerasit Kamnuansilpa, “Charges against Academics Harm Nation,” Bangkok Post, August 29, 2017, http://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/1314859/charges-against-academics-harm-nation (accessed September 3, 2017).
4 These individuals are academics Pavin Chachavalpongpun and Somsak Jeamteerasakul and journalist Andrew MacGregor Marshall. See “Thailand Bans Online Contact with Three Critics of Regime,” The Guardian, April 13, 2017, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/apr/13/thailand-bans-online-sharing-of-articles-by-three-critics-of-regime (accessed September 4, 2017).
5 The Byzantinist Speros Vryonis was a rare exception, and it is perhaps not coincidental that he often spoke out, as I do here, about the necessity of placing regional studies in a comparative context.
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10 Insisting on a particular and exclusive way of doing scholarship reproduces what Benjamin Zawacki, in documenting Thailand's political tilt away from the United States and toward China, shows to be a source of great resentment among Thai politicians: the condescending (and sometimes downright insulting) instructions meted out to them by their American allies, sometimes along with an equally infuriating refusal to take a principled stand. Zawacki, Benjamin, Thailand: Shifting Ground between the US and a Rising China (London: Zed Books, 2017), 232–34Google Scholar. “Lecturing” one's politico-military allies and one's academic colleagues alike can breed profound annoyance. In this respect, academia and geopolitics mirror each other.
11 On the legal and social difficulties of LGBT people in Thailand today, see Julia Boccagno, “A Dream Deferred: A Look at Transgender Discrimination in Thailand,” Huffington Post, December 4, 2015, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/transgender-discrimination-thailand_us_5661b9eae4b072e9d1c5cd78 (accessed September 3, 2017).
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17 Given the role of archaeology in the state-driven construction of modern Greek identity, it is significant that one of the first Greek scholars to use the term “crypto-colonialism” was the archaeologist Dimitris Plantzos. Plantzos, Dimitris, “The Kouros of Keratea: Constructing Subaltern Pasts in Contemporary Greece,” Journal of Social Archaeology 12, no. 2 (2012): 220–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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19 I Avyi [Athens leftist newspaper], May 20, 2010. See also Kallivretakis, Leonidas, “‘Apopse tha yini Tailandhi’: I erminia enos ‘eksotikou’ sinthimatos tis ekseyersis tou Politekhniou” [Tonight (this place) will become Thailand: The interpretation of an “exotic” slogan of the Polytechnic uprising], Takhidhromos 246 (2004): 46–51 Google Scholar.
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24 Wimmer, Andreas and Schiller, Nina Glick, “Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences,” Global Networks 2, no. 4 (2002): 301–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Chayan Vaddhanaphuti made a very similar point in his own opening remarks to the conference.
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32 See Pipyrou, Stavroula, The Grecanici of Southern Italy: Governance, Violence, and Minority Politics (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Leite, Naomi, Unorthodox Kin: Portuguese Marranos and the Global Search for Belonging (Oakland: University of California Press, 2017)Google Scholar.
33 Herzfeld, Michael, “The Blight of Beautification: Bangkok and the Pursuit of Class-Based Urban Purity,” Journal of Urban Design 22, no. 3 (2017): 291–307CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The so-called beautification of Bangkok displays what Eli Elinoff has recently called the “weaponizing” of urban space; this formulation is akin to my own usage of “spatial cleansing,” a term that deliberately evokes the parallel of “ethnic cleansing.” Eli Elinoff, “Despotic Urbanism in Thailand,” New Mandala, May 4, 2017, http://www.newmandala.org/despotic-urbanism-thailand/ (accessed September 6, 2017); Herzfeld, Michael, “Spatial Cleansing: Monumental Vacuity and the Idea of the West,” Journal of Material Culture 11, no. 1–2 (2006): 127–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
34 See Sopranzetti (2012, 2017), op. cit. note 8.
35 Herzfeld, Michael, The Body Impolitic: Artisans and Artifice in the Global Hierarchy of Value (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004)Google Scholar.
36 See Harrison, Rachel V. and Jackson, Peter A., eds., The Ambiguous Allure of the West: Traces of the Colonial in Thailand (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2009)Google Scholar.
37 The practice of requiring that all Thais stand to attention every evening during the broadcast of the national anthem supports the same metonymic relationship. Such arrangements are common wherever a system of hereditary monarchy holds sway and in some countries, such as Turkey, where it does not. Thai governmental officials, even during periods of democratic governance, are usually required to wear quasi-military uniforms for all official functions.
38 Herzfeld (2016), op. cit. note 20, 93.
39 Askew, Marc, Performing Political Identity: The Democrat Party in Southern Thailand (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2008)Google Scholar; Kitiarsa, Pattana, “Kickboxer,” in Figures of Southeast Asian Modernity, eds. Joshua Barker, Erik Harms, and Johan Lindquist (Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2014), 119–20Google Scholar. One of the older community leaders at Pom Mahakan, now deceased, was a kickboxing teacher, and his presence was used as part of the community's claim to represent traditional (“historical”) Thai culture.
40 See Bakalaki, Alexandra, “Gender-Related Discourses and Representations of Cultural Specificity in Nineteenth-Century and Twentieth-Century Greece,” Journal of Modern Greek Studies 12, no. 1 (1994): 75–106 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Loos, Tamara, Subject Siam: Family, Law, and Colonial Modernity in Thailand (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2006)Google Scholar.
41 E.g., Duangwises, Narupon and Jackson, Peter A., eds., Phet Lak Chet-si: Phahuwattanatham Thang-phet nai Sangkhom Thai – Cultural Pluralism and Sex/Gender Diversity in Thailand (Bangkok: Princess Maha Chatri Sirindhorn Anthropology Centre, 2013)Google Scholar; Pravattiyagul, Jutathorn, “Abusive Relationships: Thai Transgender Women and European Men,” Criminología y Justicia 3, no. 7 (2014): 51–57 Google Scholar. Kathoey are usually biologically born as male, but dress and act as females.
42 Faubion, James D., Modern Greek Lessons: A Primer in Historical Constructivism (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For more recent expansions on this topic, see Panayis Dendrinos, “Contemporary Greek Male Homosexualities: Greek Gay Men's Experiences of the Family, the Military and the LGBT Movement,” PhD thesis, University of Glasgow, 2008; Riedel, Brian S., “Forlorn, Ancient District: Gázi as Gayborhood?” Journal of Mediterranean Studies 18 (2010): 241–64Google Scholar.
43 See Van Steen, Gonda A. H., Venom in Verse: Aristophanes in Modern Greece (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2000), 181 Google Scholar.
44 Rural Greeks, on the other hand, would see discretion as typifying their own somewhat gender-segregated world. Few rural Greeks would act as did the Thai informant who told me that, as his wife knew more of a certain matter than he did, I should visit her alone at their home to discuss it.
45 Anecdotally, it was reported to me that some Thai members of the audience did experience some difficulty in understanding the Greek materials. While such difficulty is understandable, it also points to the value and perhaps also the urgency of inserting comparative materials of this kind in Thai studies curricula. See now Haberkorn, Tyrell, “Engendering Sedition: Ethel Rosenberg, Daranee Charnchoengsilpakul, and the Courage of Refusal,” positions 24, no. 3 (2016): 621–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
46 The current Greek crisis and the 1997 financial crisis in Thailand, while not identical in cause or trajectory, also point to a possible common effect of the crypto-colonial condition.
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