Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:708Hits:20289414Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID142846
Title ProperSpectre of modernity and the modern spectre
LanguageENG
AuthorPattarakulvanit, Chusak
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article re-examines the significance of Senee Saowaphong’s canonical Thai novel Peesart (The Spectre) in two key ways: by locating this work in the context of the rapid economic and social changes that took place in Thailand after the Second World War, and by identifying the modernist impulse as an underlying novelistic structure that forms and informs the clashes between the aristocrats and the commoners and between the urban and the rural. Employing Bhabha’s concept of hybridity and Anderson’s double provincialism, the article rereads the novel’s protagonist, Sai Seema, an iconic hero of the 1970s Thai student movement, as a hybrid figure. It is the ambivalence and undecidability of this character that destabilizes and subverts the power and authority of Bangkok elites in the text.
`In' analytical NoteSouth East Asia Research Vol. 23, No.4; Dec 2015: p.459-472
Journal SourceSouth East Asia Research 2015-12 23, 4
Key WordsModernity ;  Hybridity ;  Thai Literature ;  Senee Saowaphong ;  The Spectre (Peesart) ;  Urban–Rural Divide