Thai migrants in Singapore: state,intimacy and desire |
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Authors: | Pattana Kitiarsa |
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Affiliation: | Southeast Asian Studies Programme, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore |
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Abstract: | In this article, I analyse Thai migration to Singapore, drawing on ethnographic fieldwork (2004–06) to discuss the experiences of male construction workers and female sex workers in negotiating heterosexuality during their temporary residence. I argue that these Thai migrants engage in transient heterosexual encounters as one of many calculated, strategic ways of negotiating their intimate identity and subjectivity in the survival circuits of this global city. Their transient sexual acts are intimate products of negotiated moves, which form a major part of their semi-anonymous, temporary life in a foreign land. The sexual practices of Thai migrant workers in Singapore, I argue, are best understood by taking the following factors into account: the host government's regulation and control of its migrant population; the foreign workers' economic and social situations of mobility as inscribed in their highly dynamic traveling biographies; and their rationalized willingness and desire to embrace transient sexual intimacies as part of their employment and/or struggling lives in the global city's survival circuits. |
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Keywords: | Thai migrant workers transnational labor migration migrant heterosexual intimacy ethnography Singapore |
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