The good individuals of the state: middle-class culture and politics in Thai biographical films after 2006
Abstract
This thesis studies Thai bourgeois individuality as
reflected in selected Thai biographical films released since
2006, an important year in Thai political history, when the
military staged a coup, toppling former prime minister, Thaksin
Shinawatra. In particular, it examines how different forms of
individuality in these films allow us to understand the political
agenda or desire of many members of the urban middle class in the
midst of on-going political crises and conflicts after 2006.
Since the late 1990s, Thai film culture has seen a rise in the
number of biographical films. However, in academic literature
this film genre has remained under- explored and theorised,
notably in the context of the socio-political transformation of
Thailand in the same period of the emergence of these films. In
this thesis, I attempt to provide both a theoretical
understanding of the rise of biographical films and critical
insight into how the production of these films can be viewed as
integral to the conservative Thai middle-class culture of the
present time. I approach these biographical films by using a
framework that combines knowledge of the historical development
of the Thai middle class—in which this thesis posits that this
class has emerged and developed by allying itself with the power
of the feudal establishment— and how this class‘s ideology is
represented in biographical film narrative. Each chapter reveals
how different aspects of Thai middle-class ideology are portrayed
through forms of individuality represented in each film,
particularly the form of individuality that is embodied in the
characterisation of the protagonist. The central argument of this
thesis is that the forms of individuality embedded in the
protagonists of biographical films reflect the hybrid
bourgeois-feudal cultural values of the Thai middle class. These
hybrid cultural values of the Thai middle class serve to promote
the power of the traditional establishment group as well as to
maintain the middle class‘s coalition with the establishment.
Most importantly, when looking at the political situation in the
country after 2006 through these biographical films, the forms of
bourgeois-feudal individuality and cultural values depicted in
the films become a set of parameters that helps identify and
specify different kinds of political agendas and desires of many
members of Thailand‘s urban middle class in the context of the
challenging political situation in this period. In particular,
this thesis studies Thaksin‘s political group and the Red Shirt
movement as forces which, since 2006, have challenged the
coalition of the middle class and the establishment.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description