Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)

The term “tribu”/ “tribe” as a colonial construct has spawned a highly politicized understanding of differences among various ethnolinguistic groups in the Philippines. It was used both by the Spanish and American colonizers to create the image of the colonized as a disparate group of people unworth...

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Main Author: Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Philippines 2018-06-01
Series:Humanities Diliman
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/6125/5445
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author Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel
author_facet Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel
author_sort Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel
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description The term “tribu”/ “tribe” as a colonial construct has spawned a highly politicized understanding of differences among various ethnolinguistic groups in the Philippines. It was used both by the Spanish and American colonizers to create the image of the colonized as a disparate group of people unworthy of becoming a nation. It has also been used in the contemporary discourse among Filipinos as an apellation to ethnic groups who have been marginalized and minoritized on account of their resistance to the homogenizing “political, social and cultural inroads of colonization “ (Republic Act 8371). As the study probes into the nuances of “tribe” as it underwent the process of textualization and reproduction from the colonial to the post-colonial context, it aims to contribute to the emerging discourses in children’s literature as it intersects with the politics of representation and ethnicity. At this juncture, it may be asked: How does one make sense of “tribe” in the contemporary children’s literature, both as an ethnic category engendered by our colonial experience and as a discourse that generated certain images of the “indigenous”? Have the “colonial imaging and imaginings” been reproduced to perpetuate the prevailing notions of “physical isolation,” “backwardness,” “inferiority” and “savagery”? Or has “tribe” been redefined to provide a counter-image and challenge the status quo? The study analyzes fifteen (15) stories for children that feature representations of indigenous children during the first decade of the present century. Two things are taken into account: textual and visual representations. The former necessitates a closer look into how the narratives either reinforce or contradict the dominant imaging of the so-called tribal children. On the other hand, the illustrations as paratext are treated as a site of transactions or even tensions between the reader and the author. All of these are deemed important to provide a more nuanced view of ethnic categories as an embattled terrain, a dynamic negotiation between the “Self” and the “Other”.
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spelling doaj.art-e91bf9baff664b59bbc32a1a44eeda982022-12-22T03:25:34ZengUniversity of the PhilippinesHumanities Diliman1655-15322012-07882018-06-011515784Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel0University of the PhilippinesThe term “tribu”/ “tribe” as a colonial construct has spawned a highly politicized understanding of differences among various ethnolinguistic groups in the Philippines. It was used both by the Spanish and American colonizers to create the image of the colonized as a disparate group of people unworthy of becoming a nation. It has also been used in the contemporary discourse among Filipinos as an apellation to ethnic groups who have been marginalized and minoritized on account of their resistance to the homogenizing “political, social and cultural inroads of colonization “ (Republic Act 8371). As the study probes into the nuances of “tribe” as it underwent the process of textualization and reproduction from the colonial to the post-colonial context, it aims to contribute to the emerging discourses in children’s literature as it intersects with the politics of representation and ethnicity. At this juncture, it may be asked: How does one make sense of “tribe” in the contemporary children’s literature, both as an ethnic category engendered by our colonial experience and as a discourse that generated certain images of the “indigenous”? Have the “colonial imaging and imaginings” been reproduced to perpetuate the prevailing notions of “physical isolation,” “backwardness,” “inferiority” and “savagery”? Or has “tribe” been redefined to provide a counter-image and challenge the status quo? The study analyzes fifteen (15) stories for children that feature representations of indigenous children during the first decade of the present century. Two things are taken into account: textual and visual representations. The former necessitates a closer look into how the narratives either reinforce or contradict the dominant imaging of the so-called tribal children. On the other hand, the illustrations as paratext are treated as a site of transactions or even tensions between the reader and the author. All of these are deemed important to provide a more nuanced view of ethnic categories as an embattled terrain, a dynamic negotiation between the “Self” and the “Other”.http://www.journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/6125/5445Children’s literatureethnicitypolitics of representationindigenous peoples
spellingShingle Mary Jane B. Rodriguez-Tatel
Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
Humanities Diliman
Children’s literature
ethnicity
politics of representation
indigenous peoples
title Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
title_full Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
title_fullStr Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
title_full_unstemmed Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
title_short Pag-iimahen sa Batang “Katutubo” sa Ilang Piling Kuwentong Pambata: Sipat at Siyasat sa Kolonyal na Diskurso ng “Tribu” (Imaging the “Ind igenous” Child in Selected Stories for Children: Revisiting and Revisioning “Tribe” as a Colonial Discourse)
title_sort pag iimahen sa batang katutubo sa ilang piling kuwentong pambata sipat at siyasat sa kolonyal na diskurso ng tribu imaging the ind igenous child in selected stories for children revisiting and revisioning tribe as a colonial discourse
topic Children’s literature
ethnicity
politics of representation
indigenous peoples
url http://www.journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/6125/5445
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