ANCUTA:
2017
Katarzyna Ancuta
„Beyond the
Vampire:
Revamping
Thai Monsters for the Urban Age”, în
eTropic, 16.1, 2017:
‘Tropical Liminal: Urban Vampires & Other
Bloodsucking Monstrosities’ Special Issue, pp. 31-45. (pdf.)
Abstract
This article revisits two of
the most iconic Thai monstrosities, phi pop and phi krasue, whose changing
representation owes equally as much to local folklore, as to their ongoing
reinterpretations in popular culture texts, particularly in film and television.
The paper discusses two such considerations, Paul Spurrier’s P (2005) and
Yuthlert Sippapak’s Krasue Valentine (2006), films that reject the
long-standing notion that animistic creatures belong in the countryside and
portray phi pop and phi krasue’s adaptation to city life. Though commonplace,
animistic beliefs and practices have been deemed incompatible with the dominant
discourses of modernization and urbanization that characterise twenty-first
century Thailand. Creatures like phi pop and phi krasue have been branded as
uncivilised superstition and ridiculed through their unflattering portrayals in
oddball comedies. This article argues that by inviting these monsters to
relocate to contemporary Bangkok, Spurrier and Sippapak redefine their
attributes for the modern urban setting and create hybrids by blending local
beliefs and cinematic conventions. The creatures’ predatory character is additionally
augmented by the portrayal of the city as itself vampiric. The article therefore
reads these predatory spirits in parallel with the metaphor of the female vampire
– a sexually aggressive voracious creature that threatens male patriarchal order
and redefines motherhood.
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