The Making of the Igorot: Ramut Ti Panagkaykaysa Dagiti Taga Cordillera : Contours of Cordillera Consciousness

Front Cover
Ateneo University Press, 2005 - Social Science - 345 pages

The Philippines' Cordilera mountains of Northern Luzon have long been known as home to the peoples termed Igorots. Throughout the Spanish era, however, familiarity among highland peoples was frequently circumscribed. Mutual suspicions and long-standing enmity based on widespread headhunting practices in the Cordillera characterized many intervillage relationships. There was no broadly shared consciousness or solidarity among mountaineers.

This work examines how and why American colonial rule transformed social and spatial relations across the Cordillera, creating a distinctive pan-Cordillera Igorot ethnoregional consciousness. It analyzes the ways in which the establishment of Mountain Province in the early 1900s and the imposition of direct American rule served to discourage contact between highlanders and lowlanders, while reinforcing notions of highlander connectedness.

The author demonstrates the central role of Baguio City as an ethnically diverse urban center for cultural comparison and change that served as a crucible for the emergence of a robust Igorot identity. At the same time, he captures how, in different ways, succeeding generations of highlanders embraced the social and spatial bonds associated with Igorot-ism and Igorot-land.

Based on this constructed ethnoregional consciousness, Finin illuminates how Igorots or Cordillerans during the 1980s and 1990s articulated this image of oneness in resisting the Marcos regime's dam and logging projects, and in subsequent calls for a Cordillera autonomous region similar to Mindanao.

 

Contents

CHAPTER 2
19
CHAPTER 3
41
CHAPTER 4
77
CHAPTER 5
107
CHAPTER 6
141
CHAPTER 7
177
CHAPTER 8
211
CHAPTER 9
235
CHAPTER 10
273
Notes
287
Bibliography
321
Index
334
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