ART, DESIGN & CULTURECULTUREBOOK REVIEW – Very Bangkok: In the City of the Senses

BOOK REVIEW – Very Bangkok: In the City of the Senses

Very Bangkok, Philip Cornwel-Smith’s much-awaited follow-up to his bestselling popular culture book Very Thai features a similarly rich exploration of Bangkok’s genetic makeup.

Like a drone hovering over the City of Angels, Philip Cornwel-Smith’s new book Very Bangkok records, synthesizes and ultimately reveals a high-definition view of the city. One can choose to magnify the action or minimise it into tiny pixels. Very Thai, a casual (yet academically cited) anthropological work originally published in 2005, introduced a fresh approach to understanding and appreciating Thailand’s many cultural touch points, and laid the foundation for Very Bangkok.

Very Bangkok is a fun read during normal, happy-go-lucky times. In this challenging COVID-19 era, the book becomes a secret revealer: a dense up-to-date reference point of the Bangkok phenomenon. Cornwel-Smith leaves almost no names out (and they are all the right names), and that is perhaps why it took him over a decade to complete it after Very Thai

Creative Bangkok Senses walk: (left) Tuk tuk loudspeakers, (right) Morlam kid busker Siam

The Thai capital fits the definition of a primate city—a city in which all things are disproportionately concentrated: population, economics, politics, education, and culture, to name just a few. Very Bangkok peels back these layers and assesses them piece-by-piece. Cornwel-Smith no doubt has absorbed the pulse of the city.

Sights, sounds, sex, rites, ethnicities and “yaan,” or neighbourhoods, are among Bangkok’s complex layers. Take the author’s choice of the word “yaan” to illustrate neighbourhood enclaves and how one identifies with where one lives. Colloquially, Bangkokians say “thaew” (literally “a row”) to designate the area where they live or where they are heading to or returning from. While “yaan” may connote a sense of traditional belonging, “thaew” is more neutral and natural to the tongue. But by throwing in the word “chumchon,” which offers a gust of low status, one can start to sense the hierarchical make-up of the city.

Talad Noi shophouse community

For instance, Google Maps recently changed “Soi Ruamrudee” to “Soi Ruamrudee Community” or “Chumchon Soi Ruamrudee,” to the surprise of some digital wanderers. Is Soi Ruamruedee being downgraded by the whiff of “chumchon” or being democratized to offer a sense of equality by a mysterious digital agenda? One cannot be sure, but this “yaan,” along with many others, is a telling tale of what’s in Very Bangkok.

Redevelopment in Soi Ruam Rudi

As a city, Bangkok has always possessed an air of superiority, attitude, and of power. It is a dynastic seat, Thailand’s political and economic apex. Very Bangkok charts this unique position, while also exploring “Thainess” and urban identity both from a historical perspective and via the excuses of “exceptionalism.”

On Clubhouse, the audio-based social media app that’s become a hit in Thailand, certain types of Bangkokians are immediately felt. These include those with similar airs, those in the “chumchon” versus those in the high-rises, and street vendors versus mall and digital sellers. What might seem like a clash among personalities becomes equalising civic voices, debating the city’s reasons and ramifications. In a way, Clubhouse “rooms” are like the new theatre that is “very Bangkok” itself. Meanwhile, readers can keep Cornwel-Smith’s Very Bangkok nearby to help them decipher some of the hidden meanings of what Bangkokians are discussing.

(left) Girls in Khlong Toei, (right) Bangkok Midtown Siam project

FAST FACTS:

Very Bangkok: In the City of the Senses 

Author: Philip Cornwel-Smith

ISBN: 978 616 451 043 2

Size: H240 x W170 mm

No. of pages: 360 pages

Specification: 450 colour photographs, 2 colour maps, hardback

Publisher: River Books

River Books Shop: www.facebook.com/riverbooksbk/

Special Offer: Save 200 baht on each copy of Very Bangkok or Very Thai purchased online at Hardcover: The Art Book Shop at Open House Central Embassy. Simply enter the discount code “verybangkok” at check-out.

Also available from leading retailers, including:

https://www.amazon.com/Very-Bangkok-Senses-Philip-Cornwel-Smith

A cultural entrepreneur in publishing, art, and design, whose ventures include Serindia Publications and Hardcover: The Art Book Shop in Bangkok. His latest addition is The Kolophon Libraries and Research Services, a knowledge service hub with specialized print and digital collections that help creative individuals find ideas and solutions to projects. He is also a contributing writer in art and architecture and wrote for The Magazine, Monocle’s Bangkok City Guide.

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