Performing <i>Land of Smiles</i>: Dramatization as Research in Thailand’s Antitrafficking Movement

Authors

  • Erin M. Kamler Chiang Mai University

Keywords:

performance, Thailand, trafficking, feminist international research

Abstract

This article presents a study of how the writing, composing, and production of the feminist musical Land of Smiles productively exposed and troubled the normative discourses of Thailand’s antitrafficking movement. Engaging three sets of focus group participants—Western nongovernmental organization employees, female migrants from Burma, and Western and Thai artistic production staff members—I sought to understand how discourses around victimhood, rescue, and morality were transformed following a production of the musical in Chiang Mai, Thailand. I argue that the musical performance served as a site of intervention in these discourses, allowing participants to critically evaluate the roles they play in the antitrafficking movement. This intervention represents a new approach to feminist international research, which I call “dramatization as research.”

Author Biography

Erin M. Kamler, Chiang Mai University

Erin Kamler, PhD is an American researcher, writer, composer and musician whose work focuses on the intersection of feminist social justice and the arts. Dr. Kamler earned her Ph.D. from USC’s Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, where her research focused on using the arts as a tool for political communication and human rights witnessing. Her dissertation project engages a study of the trafficking of women in Thailand and critiques the State Department-driven anti-trafficking movement through the lens of culture and feminist international relations. Conversationally fluent in the Thai language, Dr. Kamler has conducted qualitative fieldwork with anti-trafficking NGOs, government actors, female migrants and trafficking survivors. Dr. Kamler holds a Bachelor of Arts in music composition from Sarah Lawrence College, a Masters in Public Diplomacy and a Masters in Communication Arts from USC’s Annenberg School. She is a recipient of the USC Graduate School’s prestigious Research Enhancement Fellowship and Diploma of Innovation Award. Currently, Dr. Kamler works as an Affiliated Researcher at Chiang Mai University and as an international development consultent in Yangon, Myanmar. To learn more about her work visit www.erinkamler.net.

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Published

2016-07-27

Issue

Section

Articles