Culture and Communication in Thailand (Communication, Culture and Change in Asia)

(Michael S) #1
characterized by mutual distrust and formality. Because the Thai view of the
world lacks a center in which the opposites between power and morality can be
overcome, they have to take notice of both in everyday life and have to act
according to the situation in which theyfind themselves.


  1. In Thailand, as documented in other parts of the world as well, one observes at
    least two interrelated developments with regard to the production and con-
    sumption of media software and hardware. On the one hand, there is a tendency
    to import cultural content and technology and develop local imitations, that is,
    attempting to forge a more autonomous culture, independent of but at the same
    time borrowing from foreign (mainly Western) cultures. On the other hand, as is
    the case in the West, one observes that in spite of the better production quality
    the majority of local audiences prefer programmes produced in their own
    culture.

  2. Modernization and Westernization have strengthened the animistic concept of
    power rather than weakened it. Unemployment, economic, and political crises
    have made life for the majority of the population even less attractive, so the need
    for worldly and spiritual“protection saints”has increased proportionally, just as
    the struggle for status and prestige under the growing Westernized middle
    classes has increased. Whereas before one fought with traditional
    “power-means,”the power of money anditthiphonis undermining many tra-
    ditional relationship patterns.


References


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66 4 A Village in the Jungle: Culture and Communication in Thailand

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