In the mirror of the “Other” Young Thai women´s reflection of Self in relation to gender roles and perceptions of the “Other”
Abstract
While Thailand has never been formally colonized, its society continues to be impacted by the
nation’s identity construction of “Thainess” as a response to the spread of “Westernization” in
Asia. This thesis explores how colonial ideas of the Other, the “farang”, impact ideas of Self
among four young Thai women living in Bangkok. Ethnographic fieldwork, in the form of
participant observation and semi-structured interviews, was conducted. Using a post-colonial
and intersectional lens, this paper asks how young Thai women see themselves reflected in
their female Other, the expatriate, and in what spaces these feelings of Otherness manifest itself
in their daily lives. Discussions revealed emotions of envy and admiration for the “Western”
expatriate lifestyle and freedom that interlocutors saw themselves denied. As a patriarchal
society, traditional gender roles in Thailand continue to influence young Thai women´s
experiences of Otherness. The initial physical or racial differences Thai interlocutors saw,
directly translated into broader social, cultural, and economic differences and a perceived
“white privilege”, resulting in a mixture of emotions, such as envy, admiration, or sadness,
discontent. To cope with these feelings of Otherness, interlocutors created symbolic boundaries
between themselves and the Other, reproducing socially constructed binaries of “Thai” versus
“Farang” that inform the racial divide in Thai society.
The thesis underlines the importance of being sensitive to the historical, socio-cultural contexts
in which processes of othering, boundary creation or differentiation occur and how race and
gender intersect with other factors to shape ideas of Otherness.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2024-07-04Author
Erber, Denise
Keywords
(post)colonialism
gender
Otherness and Self
“white privilege”
(im)mobility
Series/Report no.
2024:08
Language
eng