For the Indigenous Sagada Igorots of upland Cordillera in northern Philippines, domesticated pigs and etag (salted and smoked pork slices) continue to play an important role for rituals and as gastronomic vehicles for constituting and performing social relatedness, reciprocity, and redistributive functions through feasting and sharing. These deep historical practices are largely mediated by the elders of Sagada in the face of various kinds of entanglements with the state and markets over time. I characterize this mixed bundle of communal socio-affective and gastronomic ingredients as “Indigenous taste.” This essay discusses recent substantive socioeconomic changes in Sagada due largely to mass tourism and the impacts they have set in motion for the aforementioned practices, and on how Sagada Igorots negotiate with the outside world under these new historical conditions.
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Fall 2024
Research Article|
August 01 2024
Indigenous Taste: On the Changing Foodways of Pigs and Etag in a Mountain Town in the Northern Philippines
Seng-Guan Yeoh
Seng-Guan Yeoh
Seng-Guan Yeoh is an associate professor in social anthropology in the School of Arts & Social Sciences, Monash University Malaysia. He is an urban anthropologist who does fieldwork primarily in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia. He also makes ethnographic documentaries. Yeoh holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
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Gastronomica (2024) 24 (3): 85–98.
Citation
Seng-Guan Yeoh; Indigenous Taste: On the Changing Foodways of Pigs and Etag in a Mountain Town in the Northern Philippines. Gastronomica 1 August 2024; 24 (3): 85–98. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2024.24.3.85
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