Burning red desires: Isan migrants and the politics of desire in contemporary Thailand

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Abstract (may include machine translation)

The Red Shirt movement, which reached its peak during May 2010, has been met with puzzlement and ambiguity by media and scholars in and beyond Thailand. Often presented as a one-man-driven movement or a 'peasant revolt', the movement has remained opaque to many observers. This article analyses the ongoing conflict through the eyes of Isan (North Eastern Thai) migrants in Bangkok, especially motorcycle taxi drivers, as motivated by 'politics of desire'. In particular, the article explores how desires for consumption are voiced by a new emerging regional middle class with a diffuse feeling of being stuck between an agricultural past and a self-employed present, due to structural limitations on social and personal development. The author examines the historical emergences and failures of these desires in a complex web of conflicting and overlapping claims to representation, capitalism and class mobility. Positioning desires at the core of the analysis and exploring their configuration and suppression in Thailand through discourses of capitalist access, self-sufficiency and social justice allows severed links to be recovered and apparent contradictions to be reconfigured. This seems necessary to understand the otherwise disconnected and incomprehensible economic, discursive and spatial dimensions of the Thai political conflict.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)361-379
Number of pages19
JournalSouth East Asia Research
Volume20
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Capitalist desire
  • Political movement
  • Red Shirts
  • Sufficiency Economy
  • Thaksin Shinawatra

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