PERFORMING GENDER AND DEVOTION IN THE PEÑAFRANCIA FESTIVAL IN THE PHILIPPINES

Authors

  • Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco University of the Philippines Diliman image/svg+xml

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22452/jati.vol25no2.7

Keywords:

cultural performance, Philippine Catholicism, panata, pre-colonial lifeways, surrogation, figuration

Abstract

The Festival of Our Lady of Peñafrancia is celebrated on a Sunday after the octave of 8 September. Housed at the Peñafrancia Basilica Minore, the image of the Peñafrancia is considered the patroness of the entire Philippine region of Bicol. In the essay, the Peñafrancia is described as a theatricalised devotion where devotees are transformed into a frenzied ensemble that normalises masculinity as a privileged norm. However, digging deeper into the festival’s peculiarity, the normalisation of masculinity is only incidental because the gendering, in fact, idealises and celebrates a figure of a woman. The idealisation and celebration of the woman-figure is asserted to have a precolonial root. In the end, it is argued that the Peñafrancia is a manifestation of a cultural community in which the pre-colonial lifeways of its members are recuperated through expressive bodily movements. At the same time, the legacy of Hispanic Catholicism is decolonised through rearticulating an indigenous past.

 

Keywords: cultural performance, Philippine Catholicism, panata, pre-colonial lifeways, surrogation, figuration

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Published

2020-12-31