The Perils of Reading Fiction: the Female Quixote and the Thai New Woman

Author:

Chaochuti Thosaeng

Abstract

Abstract British literary history routinely associated women with reading fiction, especially the novel. This association seemingly threatened male hegemony and cultural authority. It led, therefore, to the portrayal of the woman reader as a female quixote who was prone to misreading and being misled by what she read. This representation became popular during the rise of the novel in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and the New Woman's emergence at the fin-de-siècle. Similar developments took place in Siam/Thailand where the birth of fiction, the advent of the woman reader, and the New Woman's rise roughly coincided in the late 1910s and early 1920s. By examining San Thewarak's novel Bandai haeng khwam rak [Stairways to Love] (1932), this paper demonstrates the trope of the female quixote's invocation to describe the emerging Thai (New) Woman reader and the threat that she embodied that had to be managed and controlled.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,History,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Cultural Studies

Reference32 articles.

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2. Copeland, Matthew Phillip . 1993. “Contested Nationalism and the 1932 Overthrow of the Absolute Monarchy in Siam.” PhD diss., Australian National University.

3. The Siamese ‘Modern Girl’ and women's consumer culture, 1925–35;Natanaree;Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia,2019

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