ID | 164384 |
Title Proper | Mourning a Late King through Portraiture |
Other Title Information | Articulations of the Sacred and Profane in the Primate City of Bangkok |
Language | ENG |
Author | Fong, Jack |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article employs an urban sociological reading to examine mourning portraiture in the primate city of Bangkok, Thailand, following the death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX). The article argues that Bangkok’s mourning portraiture constructs a reified notion of the Thai nation acceptable to Bangkok’s elites. Through a narrative that sacralizes the late king’s historical exploits for the Thai people, Bangkok’s elites have harnessed the affluent shopping district of Pathum Wan as an aesthetic and political canvas for showcasing the transcendent and virtuous nature of their late monarch. With mourning portraiture as figure and Bangkok’s Pathum Wan as background, the nationalist implications of the imagery as they render sacred the late monarch are considered. The article concludes that the capital city’s sacralization of a deceased king is but an attempt by pro-royalist banking families to reinforce their class linkages to the Thai aristocracy by ‘working towards the monarchy,’ a trajectory illuminated by Serhat Ünaldi, one which I hope to make visible in the post-death context of mourning Rama IX. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 54, No.2; Mar 2019: p.229-247 |
Journal Source | Journal of Asian and African Studies 2019-03 54, 2 |
Key Words | Thailand ; urban ; Monarchy ; Bangkok ; Sufficiency Economy ; Bhumibol Adulyadej ; Primate City ; Portraiture ; Rama Ix ; Thaksinomics |