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Book Cover
E-book
Author Atkins, Gary, 1949- author.

Title Imagining gay paradise : Bali, Bangkok, and cyber-Singapore / Gary L. Atkins
Published Hong Kong : Hong Kong University Press ; London : Eurospan [distributor], 2012

Copies

Description 1 online resource (x, 316 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates) : illustrations, portrait
Contents pt. 1. At the end of empires -- ch. 1. The triple supremacy -- ch. 2. The problem with home (1) -- ch. 3. Men of the feast : Saranrom -- ch. 4. The escape from Nosferatu -- ch. 5. A new man for Siam -- ch. 6. Magical reality, running amok -- ch. 7. Men of the dance -- ch. 8. The triple taboo -- ch. 9. A pivotal year -- ch. 10. A final chord -- ch. 11. Dancing with Ezekiel -- ch. 12. Transition : a murder for paradise -- pt. 2. The hope for a better age -- ch. 13. Nanyang family -- ch. 14. Men of the feast : Babylon -- ch. 15. The problem with home (2) -- ch. 16. A new man for Thailand -- ch. 17. Men of the Net -- ch. 18. A pivotal day -- ch. 19. Dancing under the merlion -- ch. 20. A new nation -- Postscript -- Notes -- Select bibliography -- Index
Summary Mages of Manhood asks the question: How have gay/queer men in Southeast Asia used images of paradise to construct homes for themselves and for the different ideas of manhood they represent? The book examines how three gay men in Bali, Bangkok, and Singapore have deployed different ideas of "paradise" over the past century to create a sense of refuge and to dissent from typical notions of manhood and masculinity. For the disciplines of queer studies, gender studies, communication, and Southeast Asian studies, it provides (1) a "queer reading" of Walter Spies, a gay German painter who in the 1930s helped turned Bali into an island imagined as an ideal male aesthetic state; (2) a historical account of the absorption of Western notions of romantic heterosexual monogamy in Thailand during the reign of King Rama VI, providing an analysis of his plays, and the subsequent resistance to those notions expressed through an erotic, architectural paradise called Babylon created by a post-World War II Thai named Khun Toc; and (3) an account and analysis of the "cyber-paradise" created by a young Singaporean named Stuart Koe. The book examines their pursuit of sexual justice, the ideologies of manhood they challenged, the different types of gay spaces they created (geographic, architectural, online), and the political obstacles they have encountered. Because of its historical sweep and its focus on the relationship between gay men and ideas of Edenic space, it makes an important contribution to understanding gay/queer life in Southeast Asia
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-305) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Spies, Walter -- Influence
Koe, Stuart -- Influence
Khun Toc -- Influence
SUBJECT Khun Toc -- Influence
Koe, Stuart -- Influence
Spies, Walter -- Influence
Spies, Walter fast
Subject Gay men -- Southeast Asia -- Social conditions
Homosexuality and art.
Paradise in art.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Gay Studies.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
Civilization -- Western influences
Gay men -- Social conditions
Homosexuality and art
Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Paradise in art
Gay Asians.
SUBJECT Bali (Indonesia : Province) -- In art
Thailand -- Civilization -- Western influences. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh96011663
Subject Indonesia -- Bali (Province)
Southeast Asia
Thailand
Genre/Form Electronic books
Art
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9789888053896
9888053892
9789882209305
9882209300