Thailand
- The Worldly Kingdom by
Maurizio Peleggi
From
the mythical tropical paradise in Alex Garland's "The
Beach" to the infinitely darker world of sexual
tourism in Michel Houellebecq's "Platform",
Thailand has been cast as an exotic East Asian pleasure
park in which Western fantasies can be indulged to
excess. But this tourist Thailand conceals a people
with an intricate and fascinating history. Maurizio
Peleggi unravels the social and cultural mysteries
of this extraordinary country, charting the origins
and identity of the Thai nation, mapping the geographical,
linguistic and ethnic diversity of the territory that
at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
came to form modern Thailand. He shows how Thai identity
has been reinvented from within through a repackaging
of its heritage in magazines, cinema, novels, art
and the mass media. He goes on to explore how the
Thai people relate to the outside world: their prototypical
enemies, the Burmese; the southern Chinese immigrants;
and, above all, the farang - Westerners - who have
been involved in the region since the seventeenth
century and yet remain, for the Thais, the quintessential
'other'. He also discusses the future of Thailand
after the tsunami devastated much of the country.
This is a thematic account of a complex and ancient
people, which is deeply informed by the author's knowledge
of Thai history, politics and culture.
Co-published
with Reaktion Books Ltd
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