Fernando Zialcita
Fernando Nakpil Zialcita is a Filipino anthropologist and cultural historian. His areas of specialization are in heritage and identity; art and its cultural context; and interfaces between the foreign and the indigenous.Zialcita is a professor at the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Manila University and is program director of the Ateneo Social and Cultural Laboratory (ASCL). He obtained his M.A. in philosophy at the Ateneo de Manila University and an M.A. and Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Hawaiʻi.
His work ''Authentic Though Not Exotic: Essays on Filipino Identity'' (2005) argues against views of Filipino identity (in particular, those of the lowland Christian Filipino) as "bastardized," "corrupted," non-Asian, or too Western. Such attitudes, he claims, generally stems from the (1) "demonization of Spanish influence; (2) a limited menu of binaries of interpreting culture (i.e., colonial versus noncolonial/anticolonial and Asia versus West); (3) and reductionist [nativist] views" of culture among Filipinos, including intellectuals and scholars.
For Zialcita, lowland Christian Filipino culture, though not "exotic," (i.e., alluding to the preference of scholars and anthropologists for "uncontaminated" upland peoples as subjects for study) is an authentic and syncretic, and distinct culture, able to hold its own scholarly interest.
He proposes appreciating Filipino culture as one that is ''mestizo,'' where cultural ''mestizaje'' (derived from Mexican "mixing") is viewed as a desirable process, "articulated in terms of tensions and oppositions which are accepted as part of being human" (230). The word mestizo which implies a blending of cultures carries with it more positive associations in contrast to notions of hybridity, "mongrel," or "half-breed." Owing to a shared (syncretic or mestizo) Spanish heritage, Zialcita proposes increased interaction and comparative works between Filipino and Latin American scholars. Provided by Wikipedia
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