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REFERENCES
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Feminist Studies
Me flan Sinnott
333
The more typical and longstanding torn and dee social networks,
on the other hand, are commonly formed around female homosocial
spaces or spaces that are understood to be safe and appropriate zones
for women, particularly young and unmarried women. The dormi
tory is one such site, yet must be understood as part of a constella
tion of sites that collectively have fostered the development of tom
dee relationships and identities. Rather than explicitly queer or gay
sites, with the concomitant measures of visibility that entails, these
spaces are sites of female homosociality in which same-sex sexual
ity exists without conforming to the models of queer visibility out
lined above. To provide a larger context lor dormitory relationships,
I will turn to the historical emergence of shopping malls, factories,
and other sites that similarly provide locations for tom-dee relation
ships and identities.
In recent decades, the rates of female migration for the purposes
of employment have risen dramatically.27 Increasing employment
opportunities in transnationally driven sectors such as factories, cler
ical offices and the tourist industry have led women to migrate away
from the village and home for periods of time ranging from brief
stints as adolescents or young adults to permanent resettlement in
urban areas. Female homosocial spaces related to labor have thus
developed in factories and offices that employ mostly female work
ers. This labor migration pattern has also been accompanied by an
increase in types of spaces that function as safe and appropriate domi
ciles for women or girls living away from home.
In effect, the massive industrialization that has occurred in Thai
land since the 1960s has been made possible by the availability of women
workers, which was itself facilitated by the production of safe female
Dormitories
From 1992 to 2010 I collected information on female same-sex rela
Conclusion
Notes
John Howard, Men Like That: A Southern Queer History (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2001); Collin Johnson, "Rural Space: Queer America's
Final Frontier," Chronicle of Higher Education 52, no. 19 (2006): B15-16; Jerry
Lee Kramer, "Bachelor Farmers and Spinsters: Gay and Lesbian Identities
and Communities in Rural North Dakota," in Mapping Desire: Geographies
of Sexualities, eds. David Bell and Gill Valentine (London: Routledge, 1995),
200-23; and Weston, Long Slow Burn.
Dennis Altman, Global Sex (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), 87.
Jon Binnie, The Globalization of Sexuality (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publica
tions, 2004), 40-42.
Gordon Brent Ingram, Anne-Marie Bouthillette, and Yolanda Retter,
"Lost in Space: Queer Theory and Community Activism at the Fin-de
Millénaire," in their Queers in Space: Communities/Public Places/Sites of Resistance
(Seattle: Bay Press, 1997), 10.
Ibid., 12.
Judith Halberstam, In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives
(New York: New York LJniversity Press, 2005), 1.
See especially David Bell and Jon Binnie, The Sexual Citizen: Queer Politics
and Beyond (Maiden, MA: Polity, 2000); Meghan Cope, "Placing Gendered
Political Acts," in Mapping Women, Making Politics: Feminist Perspectives on Political
See Peter A. Jackson, Dear Uncle Go: Male Homosexuality in Thailand (Bangkok:
Bua Luang, 1995); Peter A. Jackson, "Kathoey><Gay><Man: The Histori
cal Emergence of Gay Male Identity in Thailand," in Sites of Desire, Economies
of Pleasure: Sexualities in Asia and the Pacific, eds. Lenore Manderson and Mar
garet Jolly (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997), 166 -90; and Rosa
lind Morris, "Three Sexes and Four Sexualities: Redressing the Discourses
on Gender and Sexuality in Thailand," Positions 2, no. 1 (1994): 15-43.
This is discussed at length in my Toms and Dees: Female Transgendensm and Same
sex Sexuality in Thailand (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004).
Thai sources on this topic are numerous. See especially Sulaiporn Chon
wilai, "Tua-ton nay rueng lao: Karn tor-rong thang athalak khorngying-rak-ying" [Nar
rating selves: Negotiating lesbian identity] (master's thesis, Thammasat
University, 2002); Manitta Chanchai, "Khwam pen ekalak thang sangkhom khorng
'dee' lae konlayut nai karn chat chiwit pracamwan khorng phu-ying thii mii khu-rakpen torn"
[Social identity of "dees" and daily life strategies of women who have torn
partners] (master's thesis, Thammasat University, 2003); Matthana Cheta
mee, " Withi-chiwit lae chiwit khropkhrua khorng ying-rak-ying" [Lifestyles and family
life of women who love women] (master's thesis, Thammasat University,
1995); Chonticha Salikhub, "Krabuankarn phathanaa lae thamrong ekalak khorng
ying-rak-ruam-phet" [The development and maintenance process of lesbian
See Nicholas Ford and Sirinan Kittisuksathit, Youth Sexuality: The Sexual
Awareness, Lifestyles and Related-Health Service Needs of Young, Single Factory Work
ers in Thailand (Salaya, Nakornpathom, Thailand: Institute for Population
and Social Research, Mahidol University, 1996), 35; and Thaweesit, "From
Village to Factory 'Girl.'"
See Sinnott, Toms and Dees, for greater detail regarding torn and dee con
formity to sexual norms.