Research
Research
Research
METHODOLOGY
Participants
Procedure
"...so rooted in the way we think about the world that we tend to take
the categories themselves for granted. {emphasis mine!
D
The term "taken for granted" does not mean that the notion
of being Filipino is unimportant. On the contrary, the participants
found their "Filipino-ness" an important aspect of their social
identity. This was similar to the findings of Conaco's (1996) study
on the social identification and identity of college students. One
participant from Manila remarked:
Being taken for granted meant that the idea of being Filipino
is usually unexamined, assumed, naturalized, and beyond inquiry
in the context when the people involved in an interaction are
assumed to be all Filipinos. Hence, the question "Are you a
Filipino?" is seen to be more legitimate when it comes from an
outsider. But, in the study, the participants were asked by another
Filipino to explain, examine, reflect on and even challenge their
own ideas about Filipino-ness. This was done in order to discover
how and why the meanings about being Filipino is constructed,
negotiated, and re-constructed.
Pinagmulan Kinalakhan
Kamalayan
athe way we see things, the way we look at things at saka paano natin
pine-face yung bawat sitwasyon na mc-encounzer." land how we [ace
every situation that we encounter]
Table 1. Dimensions and aspects of Filipino identity considered as integral across participant
groups
REFERENCES