Sexuality Policy Watch

Ghostly Desires: Queer Sexuality and Vernacular Buddhism in Contemporary Thai Cinema

By Arnika Fuhrmann

Through an examination of post-1997 Thai cinema and video art Arnika Fuhrmann shows how vernacular Buddhist tenets, stories, and images combine with sexual politics in figuring current struggles over notions of personhood, sexuality, and collective life. The drama, horror, heritage, and experimental art films she analyzes draw on Buddhist-informed conceptions of impermanence and prominently feature the motif of the female ghost. In these films the characters’ eroticization in the spheres of loss and death represents an improvisation on the Buddhist disavowal of attachment and highlights under-recognized female and queer desire and persistence. Her feminist and queer readings reveal the entangled relationships between film, sexuality, Buddhist ideas, and the Thai state’s regulation of heteronormative sexuality. Fuhrmann thereby provides insights into the configuration of contemporary Thailand while opening up new possibilities for thinking about queer personhood and femininity.

Table of contents

Acknowledgments

IntroductionBuddhist Sexual Contemporaneity

Nang Nak—Ghost WifeDesire, Embodiment, and Buddhist Melancholia in a Contemporary Thai Ghost Film

The Ghost SeerChinese Thai Minority Subjectivity, Female Agency, and the Transnational Uncanny in the Films of Danny and Oxide Pang

Tropical MaladySame-Sex Desire, Casualness, and the Queering of Impermanence in the Cinema of Apichatpong Weerasethakul

Making ContactContingency, Fantasy, and the Performance of Impossible Intimacies in the Video Art of Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

Under Permanent ExceptionThai Buddhist-Muslim Coexistence, Interreligious Intimacy, and the Filmic Archive

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Read the whole book online here. 



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