Beijing+30 Youth Blog: Empowering women on and beyond the page in Thailand

Date:

Author: Premrudee Mepremwattana

Premrudee Mepremwattana, Founder, Co-President, the Alexandrian Review, Fifty Squared, Thailand.
Premrudee Mepremwattana, Founder, Co-President, the Alexandrian Review, Fifty Squared, Thailand. Photo: Courtesy of Premrudee Mepremwattana

Growing up, I always loved books. I would always try to read in between classes, flip through pages during meals, and try to finish books under the closet light at night. I began dreaming of writing a book of my own too. I finished a flimsy draft of my first “novel”– three notebooks about male, white and straight characters that drank ginger ale and wore jumpers. I didn’t know — and still don’t know — what ginger ale tastes like. Thailand was also too hot for jumpers.

This was when I realized that an unconscious narrative had been already crafted: white, male, straight and without disabilities. I wrote only what I knew. What I knew to exist in books, the media and literature.

One day, I came across a novel, Nothing Burns as Bright as You, by Ashley Woodfolk. The story interweaves the incredibly powerful and poignant story of two queer girls of color that whispered validation, visibility and  understanding through shared experiences and identities. This was the first time I had felt so seen. I began exploring more books by diverse authors -- to feel validation from the experience of being a girl hiding sanitary pads in pockets, to feel visible from the shared struggle of English not being my first language, to feel represented through the intersectional identities of being queer, Asian and female. It all feels like magic — when it should be a given that we all deserve.

Women and the media is one of the 12 critical areas of concern outlined in the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. In a 2015 article on that, UN Women wrote: “The media plays a significant role in perpetuating and challenging social norms that condone discrimination or violence against women. It can objectify women but also showcase strong women leaders and protagonists who can become role models for their audience.”

Over the years, as writing grew to become one of my biggest channels for activism, I have learned that the key to advocacy is education and awareness. One of the most important frameworks for this is the consideration of intersectionality and inclusion. Always ask: “Who am I leaving behind?”

Representation and diversity the media and literature is a work in progress. There aren’t enough books portraying main characters from marginalized and underrepresented communities. There are voices and stories that have never been heard. Still, we must keep reading, writing and fighting for the representation, visibility and validation that we all deserve, in the media, literature and beyond.

Biography:

Photo: Courtesy of Elisa Shafiqah
Premrudee Mepremwattana. Photo: Courtesy of Premrudee Mepremwattana

Premrudee Mepremwattana is an 18-year-old activist, writer and student in Bangkok, Thailand. She works to bridge the gender equality gap co-president and managing director of Fifty Squared, a United Nations-recognized non-profit organization with branches across Thailand and internationally. To amplify voices in marginalized communities, she founded and is co-editor-in-chief of the Alexandrian Review. Premrudee received the Young Women in Public Affairs Award and her work has been recognized by the Social Justice Initiative, the Alliance for Young Writers and Artists, National Council of Teachers of English, among others.

  @premmy.pm  |    Premrudee Mepremwattana