Beyond the Vampire: Revamping Thai Monsters for the Urban Age

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.16.1.2017.3564

Keywords:

phi pop, phi krasue, monsters, evil spirits, Thai horror film, monstrous feminine, city vampires

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.

Author Biography

Katarzyna Ancuta, King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang, Thailand

Dr Katarzyna Ancuta is a lecturer at the Department of Languages, Faculty of Liberal Arts, King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang, Thailand. Her research interests oscillate around the interdisciplinary contexts of contemporary Gothic/Horror, currently with a strong Asian focus. Her recent publications include contributions to A New Companion to the Gothic (2012), Globalgothic (2013), The Cambridge Companion to the Modern Gothic (2014) and Ghost Movies in Southeast Asia and Beyond (2016), as well as two co-edited special journal issues on Thai (2014) and Southeast Asian (2015) horror film.

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Published

2017-05-30

How to Cite

Ancuta, K. (2017). Beyond the Vampire: Revamping Thai Monsters for the Urban Age. ETropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.16.1.2017.3564