Indigenous Media and Popular Culture in the Philippines: Representations, Voices, and Resistance

Author:   Jason Paolo Telles
Publisher:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Edition:   1st ed. 2024
ISBN:  

9789819991006


Pages:   198
Publication Date:   09 February 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Indigenous Media and Popular Culture in the Philippines: Representations, Voices, and Resistance


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Overview

This book argues that the production of media content, literature, and other forms of popular culture by Indigenous peoples (IPs), as well as their involvement as advisors, sources, or interviewees, serves as a platform for them not only to showcase their creativity but also to mediate their cultures, identities, worldviews, and activism. Through an examination of specific case studies of indigenous media and popular culture in the Philippines using textual and ethnographic methods, the chapters in this book shed light on the politics of representation, narratives of resistance, and self-representation and mediation of indigeneity and culture. They emphasize the crucial importance of addressing these issues to promote the recognition and empowerment of IPs, not only within the Philippines but also across Southeast Asia and the global context.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jason Paolo Telles
Publisher:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Imprint:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Edition:   1st ed. 2024
Weight:   0.437kg
ISBN:  

9789819991006


ISBN 10:   9819991005
Pages:   198
Publication Date:   09 February 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

"Chapter 1: Indigenous Media and Popular Culture as a Cultural Battleground (Jason Paolo Telles, University of the Philippines Baguio & Monash University)- This chapter shall serve as an introduction to the whole book. This includes a narrative of the field's background. It shall also contain a review of the state of the fields of indigenous media, literature, and pop culture studies, and the conceptual framework followed by the editor and contributors. It shall also include introductions of each chapter of the book, including their location in the growing field of indigenous media studies. Chapter 2: Radio and Indigenous Peoples in the Mountain Province (Jason Paolo Telles, University of the Philippines Baguio & Monash University)- This chapter argues that indigenous peoples groups in the Mountain Province in the Philippine Cordillera region have used radio broadcasting for cultural promotion, mediation, resistance, and self-representation. By exploring the content and production processes of local and community radio stations in the towns of Bontoc and Sagada in Mountain Province, the author determined the ways through which indigenous broadcasters configured the airwaves to become spaces for battling ideological, colonial, and imperial stereotypes, perceptions, and control against them. Meanwhile, the motivations, constraints, and political economy of indigenous radio broadcasting in the province has also been discussed to provide a holistic understanding of the media phenomena in the region. Chapter 3: The Virtual Ili: Igorot Virtual Communities through Facebook Groups (Stephanie Lagasca, University of the Philippines Baguio)- This chapter endeavors to answer the question how do Igorots, an indigenous group from the Cordillera region of the Philippines, use social media, particularly Facebook groups, to create virtual communities? This paper will further explore the concept of cyber-ili or cyber community by analyzing three Facebook groups that are public, identifying as Igorot groups, and containing the highest number of group members. This uses the Ethnic Self Identification Measurement Domains Model by Trimble, et al. (2002) to identify which Self Identification Measurement Domains Measures are commonly used by Igorot group members of the chosen Facebook groups. Finally, the chapter aims to prove that the social media paves the way in the creation of a virtual ili for the Igorot diaspora and allows them to assert their ethnic identity and converge as a community. Chapter 4: Radical Storytelling: When the Lumad Youth (Re)write the Indigenous and the Juvenile (Jose Monfred C. Sy, University of the Philippines Diliman)- In this chapter, the author proposes that stories written by Lumad students struggling against the destruction of their schools and communities in their ancestral domain trouble hegemonic essentializing and romantic constructions of both indigenous and young peoples. Indigenous peoples and the youth are tied not only in the vast quantities of oral texts that they create, but also in their socio-economic, cultural, and political marginalization in society. The study explores their reconstructions in examples of LCYA, namely Si Obello and the anthology Ang Bayabas sa Tagaytay at Ibang Kuwento mula sa Kabataan ng Paaralang Lumad (The Guavas at the Ridge and Other Stories from the Youth of Lumad Schools, 2019), books purported to contribute to the Lumad movement for self-determination by dramatizing the communities’ unshakeable conviction to defend their yutang kabilin (ancestral land). By exercising a constructive agency against “voiceless” constructedness, the tellers of these stories reposition the indigenous and the juvenile as active agents in effecting social justice. Chapter 5: The Weapon of Cultures: Necropolitics and Death in the Cinema on the Indigenous Peoples of Mindanaw (Jay Jomar Quintos, University of the Philippines Diliman)- Using Achille Mbembe’s concept of necropolitics, or “the power and capacity to dictate who is able to live and who must die,” this chapter explores how the rendering of death in the film ""Ang mga Tigmo sa Akong Pagpauli"" is primarily entwined in the unequal economic distribution, anti-poor policies that favor foreigners, and draconian power interplay propagated by the Philippine state. The systemic disenfranchisement towards the Indigenous Peoples is significantly evident in natural disasters, human rights abuses, and political violence in Mindanaw, even during the time of Rodrigo Roa Duterte – the first Mindanawon president of the Philippines. Finally, this chapter investigates how Lumad death in ""Ang mga Tigmo sa Akong Pagpauli"" can be conspicuously tragic but at the same time, a weapon of cultures. Chapter 6: Reframing & Reclaiming Kulintang Music: Countering Written History with Contemporary Reality (Mary T. Lacanlale, California State University, Dominguez Hills)- In the first musicological article about Philippine music written in the United States, Frances Densmore claimed that the music of the ""Moros'' at the 1904 World's Fair lacked any unifying forms, had ""bewildering"" rhythms, and was uncivilized. She repeatedly described the sound of the kulintang, which she referred to only as “Moro gongs,” as banging,  clashing, and fiercely aggressive, much in the same way she described the people themselves. This chapter explains Pakaraguian Kulintang Ensemble of Southern California’s approach to reclaiming and reframing Densmore’s point of view from her disposition as a researcher in the early 20th century, restoring an understanding of kulintang music through the melodies, improvisation, complex rhythmic structure, and cultural context. Each member of the ensemble reflects on several quotes by Densmore about the Sama and Maranao musicians at the 1904 World's Fair by complimenting her findings with their own research-based material from interpersonal relationships with native master artists–all of which Densmore failed to grasp and mischaracterized. Subsequently, Densmore’s article is still read as one of the first works of comparative musicology; the foundation of the discipline of ethnomusicology. Pakaraguian Kulintang Ensemble’s performance ends with Kim Kalanduyan–a Maguindanao- Filipinx-American kulintang artist raised in California who descended from the Kalanduyan family of musicians from Datu Piang, Cotabato–giving her own emic perspective on Maguindanao kulintang music contrary to Densmore's assumption that ""the native music of the Filipinos will soon pass away...until all the Filipino music shall be merged at last in 'The Star-spangled Banner.'"" Chapter 7: Lumad Voices in a Never-ending Struggle: Representation of the Lumad People’s Activism and Resistance to Oppression in Alternative Media (Belinda F. Espiritu, University of the Philippines Cebu)- This chapter looks into the direct quotations of Lumad activists, which are expressions of the Lumad peoples’ thoughts, feelings, struggles and aspirations with the onslaught of attacks by the state-military-business nexus to their ancestral lands and communities, in alternative media news stories and articles in the Philippines. Using the reflective and intentional theories of representation, this essay looks into the words of the Lumad people as a reflection of their objective reality and as the source of ultimate meaning of their words based on their experiences, background, and perspectives. At the same time, the Standpoint theory, which says that the views of the marginalized or oppressed give a more objective picture of reality than the view of those in the upper socioeconomic status, is to be used. Chapter 8: Benguet Kankana-ey Identity Construction in Local Films in the Cordillera, Philippines (Peter Pitas Dalocdoc, Jr., Benguet State University)- By examining the films produced by the Kankana-ey people in the Northern Philippines, this paper tracks the history of film production in the Benguet province, one of the traditional home lands of the Kankana-ey people, and dissects the cultural identity themes embodied in the selected films. The unearthed cultural identity themes revolve in the following areas: Use of the Kankana-ey Language, Use of other Languages, Language Preference, Familiarity with the Kankana-ey Traditional Practices and Legends, Faithand Religion, Food Preference, Migration, Family Ties, Social Values, Education, Gender Role Orientation, and Love Relationship and Marriage. A reflection of the Kankana-eys’ day-to-day lives, the local vernacular films narrate the people’s struggles and aspirations. Inspired by the historical experiences, the films brought the Kankana-ey viewers to their identity by “presenting the past.” Chapter 9: Balitok, the Creation of the Ili, and the Decentering/Recentering of the Land in Ibaloy Folklore and Literature (LA Piluden, University of the Philippines Baguio)- For centuries the Ibaloys of Benguet have used traditional methods to mine for balitok (gold) and other precious metals from their mountains. The presence of balitok, like promethean fire, transformed Ibaloy society: balitok was first intended by Kabunian to scatter the ili and introduce trade to the mountain people; gold however also brought about social stratification and the arrival of colonial forces into the interior Cordilleras. As chronicled in their wealth of folk narratives that persist to this day, the Ibaloys’ view of balitok and its acquisition teach us not only of the value of land-based thinking, wealth distribution, and resource management, but they also remind us that the world as we know it is a world of landslides: of instability and precariousness. Living in our global ili where the present climate crisis destabilizes the everyday, the Ibaloy mythology of gold is a myth for our times, reminding us of our ownunstable place in nature. Drawing from this cosmology are literary offshoots from Ibaloy writers like Sinai Hamada (""The Punishment of Kutnon"" and ""The Pagan""), Ryan Guinaran(""Umsiang""), and Melvin Magsanoc (""The Gold Rush""). These writers present a reimaginingofhow the ili is transformed by balitok (and how balitok, in turn, is transformed by us), from Hamada's reportage of local life in the early colonial period, Guinaran's Itogon-inspired verses about the transformation and objectification of land through the mining of gold, to Melvin Magsanoc's poem about a gold rush that erodes not only the physicality of the land but also our collective well-being. Chapter 10: Epilogue: Theorization and Futures of Indigenous Media in the Philippines (Jason Paolo Telles, University of the Philippines Baguio and Monash University)- This final chapter seeks to present a theorization and/or a conceptualization of indigenous media, literature, and pop culture in the Philippines. This shall serve as a conclusion and examination of the ""identity,"" characteristics, and features of such cultural products, as well as their significance and roles in indigenous communities and even the society at large. Future trajectories and recommended research tracks shall also be discussed here."

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Author Information

Jason Paolo Telles is the Founder and Founding Executive Director of the Southeast Asian Media Studies Association (SEAMSA), an international, non-profit, non-government academic community that is actively committed to the study of media within the context of Southeast Asia. His research centers on critical media histories, indigenous media, the mediation of culture and/or the environment in media and popular culture, and the study of media within the context of Southeast Asian countries. Jason has also co-edited the Springer-published book Environment, Media, and Popular Culture in Southeast Asia with John Charles Ryan and Jeconiah Louis Dreisbach in 2022.

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