SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  55
Philippine Visual Urban Culture JaymeeSiao
Reading the Urban A person’s environment shapes the way he or she thinks and acts. As the person creates the place he or she inhabits, the place can also as much create the person.
EDSA as a site of resistance
Epifaniodelos Santos Avenue (EDSA) A 54-kiometer avenue stretching from the south (City of Parañaque) to the north (City of Caloocan) of Metro Manila. Main passageway in routing Manila’s key commecial and industrial districts.
PanopticismMichel Foucault (1995, 197-198) A technology of observation where prisoners are observed without the benefit of knowing that they are being observed based on a styled architecture of the prison.
Through advertisement, potential consumers are surveyed and categorized.
The consumers, specifically their desires, are definitely framed in the billboards But no matter how advertisers frame consumer desires, some things are bound to become excesses.
The Body as a Locus of Power Billboard advertisements often imposes a single meaning. Billboards actually sell “emotions,” and what one gets is an impression of a play of words and images.
The Body as Medium and Metaphor of CultureSusan Bordo (1995) The body has much to say about the conventions which are imposed on it, becoming an articulation of these impositions: The representations of the ideal body turned into a desirable object through the framing of a glamorized billboard.
These displays are in fact unnatural as they are constructed and regulated, presented and imposed as normalized bodies. Differences are effaced, as “plasticity” or reconstructivity becomes the new standard of beauty. These do not merely transform the consumer, but normalize them completely – their thoughts leading to their actions.
EDSA as a Site of Desire EDSA, as a “body,” is being made through the readings of its billboards’ meanings. It is a reflection of a product of bodies, and yet, in itself, is also a body on display. Like a tattooed body, EDSA has become the convenient place to prop up these gigantic images to catch the consumer’s eyes and trap them in a world of colorful images and attractive phrases.
Billboards as Panoptic Devices; or, EDSA as a Site of Surveillance One’s view of EDSA is a panoptic one, where ads are invasive; depriving the people of mental and physical space, while bombarding them with glossy and glamorized information.
Fallacy of Intention It is not enough to rely upon the intentional meanings of billboards. One should grasp the consumer’s role in the production of meanings; how thy understand the product or the message conveyed, and how they use the product in their everyday life.
Through misreadings, the intended purposes of advertisers are short-circuited.  The emancipatory value of the text shows through the consumer’s viewing, and their reinjection of meaning into it. The passion of meaning itself becomes the life-giver in a billboard ad, sustaining it and assuring the communicative exchange between its makers  (advertisers) and its viewers (consumers).
Textual Warfare as Consumer Resistance No matter how strategic a billboard is in terms of location and construction, there are gaps with enough spaces for the consumer to slip through and apply his or her own private meanings and interpretations. This paves way for multiple meanings from a single  billboard ad.
The Modern-day Flâneur One that is able to perceive the world in an entirely new way. A “walking exile” whose gaze disrupts social order through interrupted meanings.
The Concept of the Bridge Infrastructure undoubtedly plays an important role in the urbanization process. Originally, a bridge is meant to facilitate movement over a body of water or elevated places. Sanjuanico Bridge
Today, bridges are made either to facilitate pedestrians in crossing hazardous streets and pedestrian traffic or making way for the overflow of transportations.
Bridges have become sites of communication and exchange in contemporary urban living. As a symbol of movement, it is not considered as a place but a means of transport. But as it now “houses” a number of different people using it as a shelter or a site of exchange, transportation is distrupted, converting the bridge into a site.
Pedestrians and Walkers They are often perceived as a collective whole.  Their encounters with the different types of people “housed” on the bridge change their own movement as well as attitude and behavior.
Vendors Creates a temporary “pit stop” for “people on the go,” ranging from makeshift food stalls to small items, both perishable and non-perishable in affordable prices. Either for a break or for “pasalubong,” people might opt to purchase these products as an immediate alternative to malls.
The Homeless and the Blind Singers The homeless have a tendency to permanently stay, either under (for privacy) or on (for territory). They expect people to pass by, generating at least a constant source in begging for alms. The blind singers court the pedestrians into giving alms, creating street performativity.
As Token Collectors People who wish to pass by the bridge are requested to give a small amount or a token of payment.
Pedestrians are arrested by the sight of the beggars’ outstretched hand that blocks their path.
Ruby Boys and Thieves Rugby boys scare off pedestrians, appropriating the space for their own use either unknowingly or without even realizing it. Thieves target the bridges with its poor lighting and lack of security, literally forcing wary pedestrians to avoid passing the bridge at all, thus dislocating traumatized pedestrians.
Postmodern urban landscape
Functionality is one of the traits of modernism. Aiming for an orderly space, modernism has sought to create an organized, practical place, with a utopian view of society as a whole.
However, functionality excludes diversity as it seeks to discipline the people into a homogenous group using the infrastructure for a specific purpose.
Ideally, bridges serve as a solution to the lack of space and ease of transport. But the activities on the streets has simply duplicated street life in these infrastructures, a sort of a simulation of it.
Whereas infrastructures strive to create order, they are also part of the cause of urban disorder. As it tends to dislocate people from urbanity, it has in turn created its own simulation of urban life, connecting different sorts of people along the way.
The postmodern city is a product of capitalism; and to perceive the city as a social space is to sense the urgency of it being a site of social contradiction.
Reading through Jameson’s “Hyperspace” Spaces have changed in order to adjust to human excess, which people have only appropriated for their own uses (or of what they have been previously accustomed to doing only in a different location altogether).
Experiencing the postmodern city as that of a sequence of several overlapping images gives the effect of a disorderly city.
Monuments as the national imaginarie
Anitos dwell in the natives’ houses because they stand as representatives of those family members who have passed way,and that may serve as intermediarie between the God (Batala), and them (the natives).
George Mosse Symbols are needed by nations, being the objectification of popular myths, giving a people their identity.
The national monument as a means of self-expression served to anchor the national myths and symbols in the consciousness of the people.
Monuments are not always ideal for a nation, as evidenced by the Philippine colonial experience where colonizers used it to augment their desires, as well as agendas for the colony. Legazpi-Urdaneta Monument (1891) City of Manila Carlos IV Monument (1808) Manila Cathedral
Surpassing the lives of their own royalties, these stone monuments mark the Spaniards’ presence not only in the Philippines but in Mexico and Panama among others, as well as promote the ideals of the Mother country (colonizer).
The Spaniards’ symbols – the monuments – have in fact portrayed people in victorious stances, to further promote the “conquistador” nature of the colonizers
Both symbolize the cross or religion as both have the stance of a conquistador, an explorer holding a sword; meant to colonize and change (“civilize”) the people; the cross and the sword being the two pillars of Spanish misióncivilizatrice. Sto. Nino Legazpi-Urdaneta Monument
American Monuments American monuments on the other hand, usually carry a book, are seen reading/studying, or even reading to someone else.
These civic virtues, evidently portrayed in their monuments, show the significant shift from the Spanish style of wanting the natives to look up to them, to the Americans’ desire to mold the Filipinos to become the way they, the Americans, are.
Apart from the theme of (children) reading together, there is the mother and child theme, prevalent in American period monuments
Reading the Postcolonial Monuments Though supposed to show celebrations of freedom, they show sufferings, instead of portraying them as proud, noble people.
Memorare 1945 GomBurZa monument
Instead of celebrating freedom, these show celebration of defeat.
The Sentinel of Freedom(Teodoro F. Valencia circle)
Significance of Monuments We create objects of memory, or memories themselves, because there is none available at hand. Monuments tend to flesh out whatever it is we think that a nation should be, or even ourselves. We project ourselves onto monuments, too, thereby seeing our reflections in them.
With the abuse of monuments – both by the viewer and the creator – a rampant phenomenon, we are threatened to have monuments which no longer hold any significance.
The Urban and the Social The many borrowedstyles in our culture are very much evident, literally, in the streets, and as such, allows for an interdisciplinary reading of the urban. The Filipinos’ resourcefulness and ingenuity, despite the pervading problems and issues that he faces, show only the resilience of the Filipino spirit

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Assure 120114014203-phpapp02
Assure 120114014203-phpapp02Assure 120114014203-phpapp02
Assure 120114014203-phpapp02Amina Tariq
 
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gap
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gapeducational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gap
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gapray mijares
 
Socio Emotional Development of Late Childhood
Socio Emotional Development of Late ChildhoodSocio Emotional Development of Late Childhood
Socio Emotional Development of Late Childhoodquilantang7alvarez
 
Research paper (pre ed 2)
Research paper (pre ed 2)Research paper (pre ed 2)
Research paper (pre ed 2)Ysa Garcera
 
21st century skills
21st century skills21st century skills
21st century skillsKermit Agbas
 
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptx
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptxGroup 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptx
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptxAbegailCope
 
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)bibashenry
 
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)Jose Radin Garduque
 
Lesson 9 educational technology 10
Lesson 9  educational  technology  10Lesson 9  educational  technology  10
Lesson 9 educational technology 10ray mijares
 
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum Guide
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum GuidePhysical Education K to12 Curriculum Guide
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum GuideJoseline Santos
 
Multiple intelligence
Multiple intelligenceMultiple intelligence
Multiple intelligencelschmidt1170
 
Educational Technology: Visual Symbols
Educational Technology: Visual SymbolsEducational Technology: Visual Symbols
Educational Technology: Visual SymbolsAndre Philip Tacderas
 
Filipino mode of dressing
Filipino mode of dressingFilipino mode of dressing
Filipino mode of dressingcris-marz
 
Philippine costumes and tradition
Philippine costumes and traditionPhilippine costumes and tradition
Philippine costumes and traditionUrsula Balao
 
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived Experiences
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived ExperiencesDirect, Purposeful & Contrived Experiences
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived ExperiencesJO GALLEGOS
 

Tendances (20)

Philippine Art History
Philippine Art HistoryPhilippine Art History
Philippine Art History
 
Assure 120114014203-phpapp02
Assure 120114014203-phpapp02Assure 120114014203-phpapp02
Assure 120114014203-phpapp02
 
C 1 lesson 2
C 1   lesson 2C 1   lesson 2
C 1 lesson 2
 
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gap
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gapeducational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gap
educational technology 2 Lesson 4 bridging the generation gap
 
Socio Emotional Development of Late Childhood
Socio Emotional Development of Late ChildhoodSocio Emotional Development of Late Childhood
Socio Emotional Development of Late Childhood
 
Prehistoric art
Prehistoric artPrehistoric art
Prehistoric art
 
Philippine folk dance
Philippine folk dancePhilippine folk dance
Philippine folk dance
 
Research paper (pre ed 2)
Research paper (pre ed 2)Research paper (pre ed 2)
Research paper (pre ed 2)
 
21st century skills
21st century skills21st century skills
21st century skills
 
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptx
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptxGroup 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptx
Group 3- FSIE Typical and Atypical Development.pptx
 
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)
Ped 102 (child and adolescent dev’t)
 
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)
Philippines (Socio-Cultural Setting)
 
Lesson 9 educational technology 10
Lesson 9  educational  technology  10Lesson 9  educational  technology  10
Lesson 9 educational technology 10
 
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum Guide
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum GuidePhysical Education K to12 Curriculum Guide
Physical Education K to12 Curriculum Guide
 
Art since 1945
Art since 1945Art since 1945
Art since 1945
 
Multiple intelligence
Multiple intelligenceMultiple intelligence
Multiple intelligence
 
Educational Technology: Visual Symbols
Educational Technology: Visual SymbolsEducational Technology: Visual Symbols
Educational Technology: Visual Symbols
 
Filipino mode of dressing
Filipino mode of dressingFilipino mode of dressing
Filipino mode of dressing
 
Philippine costumes and tradition
Philippine costumes and traditionPhilippine costumes and tradition
Philippine costumes and tradition
 
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived Experiences
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived ExperiencesDirect, Purposeful & Contrived Experiences
Direct, Purposeful & Contrived Experiences
 

En vedette (20)

Urban cultures
Urban culturesUrban cultures
Urban cultures
 
Human geography6
Human geography6Human geography6
Human geography6
 
Animalism
AnimalismAnimalism
Animalism
 
Polytheism and monotheism
Polytheism and monotheismPolytheism and monotheism
Polytheism and monotheism
 
Urban Visual Designs by lobzzz
Urban Visual Designs by lobzzzUrban Visual Designs by lobzzz
Urban Visual Designs by lobzzz
 
Urban communities - Class notes
Urban communities - Class notesUrban communities - Class notes
Urban communities - Class notes
 
Urban culture
Urban cultureUrban culture
Urban culture
 
Urban Communities
Urban CommunitiesUrban Communities
Urban Communities
 
Filipino culture
Filipino cultureFilipino culture
Filipino culture
 
Chapter 17 urban communities
Chapter 17 urban communitiesChapter 17 urban communities
Chapter 17 urban communities
 
Community Powerpoint
Community PowerpointCommunity Powerpoint
Community Powerpoint
 
Chapter 16
Chapter 16Chapter 16
Chapter 16
 
Community Presentation
Community PresentationCommunity Presentation
Community Presentation
 
Community development
Community developmentCommunity development
Community development
 
Urbanization in the philippipines
Urbanization in the philippipinesUrbanization in the philippipines
Urbanization in the philippipines
 
Urban, suburban and rural communities
Urban, suburban and rural communitiesUrban, suburban and rural communities
Urban, suburban and rural communities
 
Philippine Cultural System
Philippine Cultural SystemPhilippine Cultural System
Philippine Cultural System
 
What is a COMMUNITY?
What is a COMMUNITY?What is a COMMUNITY?
What is a COMMUNITY?
 
What is a community
What is a communityWhat is a community
What is a community
 
Community Types for Kids (2nd Grade)
Community Types for Kids (2nd Grade)Community Types for Kids (2nd Grade)
Community Types for Kids (2nd Grade)
 

Similaire à Philippine visual urban culture

Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docx
Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docxWhose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docx
Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docxtroutmanboris
 
URBAN_disLocation_Small
URBAN_disLocation_SmallURBAN_disLocation_Small
URBAN_disLocation_SmallMehak Sachdeva
 
Public spaces:open/closed
Public spaces:open/closedPublic spaces:open/closed
Public spaces:open/closedlingvo
 
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revised
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revisedLocal culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revised
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revisedjhelambina
 
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbia
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbiaI spy ... scenes from micro-suburbia
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbialinda carroli
 
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical Walking
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical WalkingAnnaliina Niitamo: Critical Walking
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical WalkingNewPerformanceTurkuF
 
Boyle Heights Essay
Boyle Heights EssayBoyle Heights Essay
Boyle Heights EssayChristy Hunt
 
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMMerllanMier
 
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMMerllanMier
 
Defining key terms
Defining key termsDefining key terms
Defining key termstrosteck
 
Popular Culture And Pop Culture
Popular Culture And Pop CulturePopular Culture And Pop Culture
Popular Culture And Pop CultureChristy Davis
 
The Interactive culture in the XXI century
The Interactive culture in the XXI centuryThe Interactive culture in the XXI century
The Interactive culture in the XXI centuryFabio Viola
 

Similaire à Philippine visual urban culture (20)

Knowledge city human moments dvir1
Knowledge city human moments dvir1Knowledge city human moments dvir1
Knowledge city human moments dvir1
 
Group3-UCSP.pptx
Group3-UCSP.pptxGroup3-UCSP.pptx
Group3-UCSP.pptx
 
URBAN_Trans
URBAN_TransURBAN_Trans
URBAN_Trans
 
Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docx
Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docxWhose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docx
Whose Culture Whose City”from The Cultures of Cities (199.docx
 
Rownowaga 1 uk-4-7
Rownowaga 1 uk-4-7Rownowaga 1 uk-4-7
Rownowaga 1 uk-4-7
 
URBAN_disLocation_Small
URBAN_disLocation_SmallURBAN_disLocation_Small
URBAN_disLocation_Small
 
Public spaces:open/closed
Public spaces:open/closedPublic spaces:open/closed
Public spaces:open/closed
 
unaccompanied_exhibition text
unaccompanied_exhibition textunaccompanied_exhibition text
unaccompanied_exhibition text
 
Hybrid Cultures, Oblique Powers
Hybrid Cultures, Oblique PowersHybrid Cultures, Oblique Powers
Hybrid Cultures, Oblique Powers
 
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revised
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revisedLocal culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revised
Local culture, popular_culture,_and_cultural_revised
 
Off Brand Catalog
Off Brand CatalogOff Brand Catalog
Off Brand Catalog
 
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbia
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbiaI spy ... scenes from micro-suburbia
I spy ... scenes from micro-suburbia
 
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical Walking
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical WalkingAnnaliina Niitamo: Critical Walking
Annaliina Niitamo: Critical Walking
 
Boyle Heights Essay
Boyle Heights EssayBoyle Heights Essay
Boyle Heights Essay
 
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
 
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptxMIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
MIDTERM LESSON 2 (POPULAR CULTURE AND CULTURE INDUSTRY).pptx
 
Defining key terms
Defining key termsDefining key terms
Defining key terms
 
Invitation to urban studies
Invitation to urban studiesInvitation to urban studies
Invitation to urban studies
 
Popular Culture And Pop Culture
Popular Culture And Pop CulturePopular Culture And Pop Culture
Popular Culture And Pop Culture
 
The Interactive culture in the XXI century
The Interactive culture in the XXI centuryThe Interactive culture in the XXI century
The Interactive culture in the XXI century
 

Dernier

From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationFrom Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationSafe Software
 
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivityBoost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivityPrincipled Technologies
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreternaman860154
 
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationGenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationMichael W. Hawkins
 
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt Robison
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt RobisonData Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt Robison
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt RobisonAnna Loughnan Colquhoun
 
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for Partners
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for PartnersEnhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for Partners
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for PartnersThousandEyes
 
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slidevu2urc
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Drew Madelung
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerThousandEyes
 
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j
 
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024Scott Keck-Warren
 
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024Rafal Los
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024Results
 
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...Miguel Araújo
 
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxMaximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxOnBoard
 
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of ServiceCNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Servicegiselly40
 
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path Mount
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path MountBreaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path Mount
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path MountPuma Security, LLC
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationRadu Cotescu
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 

Dernier (20)

From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationFrom Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
 
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivityBoost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
 
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationGenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
 
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt Robison
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt RobisonData Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt Robison
Data Cloud, More than a CDP by Matt Robison
 
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for Partners
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for PartnersEnhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for Partners
Enhancing Worker Digital Experience: A Hands-on Workshop for Partners
 
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
 
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
 
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
 
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
 
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
 
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxMaximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
 
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of ServiceCNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
 
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path Mount
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path MountBreaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path Mount
Breaking the Kubernetes Kill Chain: Host Path Mount
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
 

Philippine visual urban culture

  • 1. Philippine Visual Urban Culture JaymeeSiao
  • 2.
  • 3. Reading the Urban A person’s environment shapes the way he or she thinks and acts. As the person creates the place he or she inhabits, the place can also as much create the person.
  • 4. EDSA as a site of resistance
  • 5. Epifaniodelos Santos Avenue (EDSA) A 54-kiometer avenue stretching from the south (City of Parañaque) to the north (City of Caloocan) of Metro Manila. Main passageway in routing Manila’s key commecial and industrial districts.
  • 6. PanopticismMichel Foucault (1995, 197-198) A technology of observation where prisoners are observed without the benefit of knowing that they are being observed based on a styled architecture of the prison.
  • 7. Through advertisement, potential consumers are surveyed and categorized.
  • 8. The consumers, specifically their desires, are definitely framed in the billboards But no matter how advertisers frame consumer desires, some things are bound to become excesses.
  • 9. The Body as a Locus of Power Billboard advertisements often imposes a single meaning. Billboards actually sell “emotions,” and what one gets is an impression of a play of words and images.
  • 10. The Body as Medium and Metaphor of CultureSusan Bordo (1995) The body has much to say about the conventions which are imposed on it, becoming an articulation of these impositions: The representations of the ideal body turned into a desirable object through the framing of a glamorized billboard.
  • 11. These displays are in fact unnatural as they are constructed and regulated, presented and imposed as normalized bodies. Differences are effaced, as “plasticity” or reconstructivity becomes the new standard of beauty. These do not merely transform the consumer, but normalize them completely – their thoughts leading to their actions.
  • 12. EDSA as a Site of Desire EDSA, as a “body,” is being made through the readings of its billboards’ meanings. It is a reflection of a product of bodies, and yet, in itself, is also a body on display. Like a tattooed body, EDSA has become the convenient place to prop up these gigantic images to catch the consumer’s eyes and trap them in a world of colorful images and attractive phrases.
  • 13. Billboards as Panoptic Devices; or, EDSA as a Site of Surveillance One’s view of EDSA is a panoptic one, where ads are invasive; depriving the people of mental and physical space, while bombarding them with glossy and glamorized information.
  • 14. Fallacy of Intention It is not enough to rely upon the intentional meanings of billboards. One should grasp the consumer’s role in the production of meanings; how thy understand the product or the message conveyed, and how they use the product in their everyday life.
  • 15. Through misreadings, the intended purposes of advertisers are short-circuited. The emancipatory value of the text shows through the consumer’s viewing, and their reinjection of meaning into it. The passion of meaning itself becomes the life-giver in a billboard ad, sustaining it and assuring the communicative exchange between its makers (advertisers) and its viewers (consumers).
  • 16. Textual Warfare as Consumer Resistance No matter how strategic a billboard is in terms of location and construction, there are gaps with enough spaces for the consumer to slip through and apply his or her own private meanings and interpretations. This paves way for multiple meanings from a single billboard ad.
  • 17. The Modern-day Flâneur One that is able to perceive the world in an entirely new way. A “walking exile” whose gaze disrupts social order through interrupted meanings.
  • 18. The Concept of the Bridge Infrastructure undoubtedly plays an important role in the urbanization process. Originally, a bridge is meant to facilitate movement over a body of water or elevated places. Sanjuanico Bridge
  • 19. Today, bridges are made either to facilitate pedestrians in crossing hazardous streets and pedestrian traffic or making way for the overflow of transportations.
  • 20. Bridges have become sites of communication and exchange in contemporary urban living. As a symbol of movement, it is not considered as a place but a means of transport. But as it now “houses” a number of different people using it as a shelter or a site of exchange, transportation is distrupted, converting the bridge into a site.
  • 21. Pedestrians and Walkers They are often perceived as a collective whole. Their encounters with the different types of people “housed” on the bridge change their own movement as well as attitude and behavior.
  • 22. Vendors Creates a temporary “pit stop” for “people on the go,” ranging from makeshift food stalls to small items, both perishable and non-perishable in affordable prices. Either for a break or for “pasalubong,” people might opt to purchase these products as an immediate alternative to malls.
  • 23. The Homeless and the Blind Singers The homeless have a tendency to permanently stay, either under (for privacy) or on (for territory). They expect people to pass by, generating at least a constant source in begging for alms. The blind singers court the pedestrians into giving alms, creating street performativity.
  • 24. As Token Collectors People who wish to pass by the bridge are requested to give a small amount or a token of payment.
  • 25. Pedestrians are arrested by the sight of the beggars’ outstretched hand that blocks their path.
  • 26. Ruby Boys and Thieves Rugby boys scare off pedestrians, appropriating the space for their own use either unknowingly or without even realizing it. Thieves target the bridges with its poor lighting and lack of security, literally forcing wary pedestrians to avoid passing the bridge at all, thus dislocating traumatized pedestrians.
  • 28. Functionality is one of the traits of modernism. Aiming for an orderly space, modernism has sought to create an organized, practical place, with a utopian view of society as a whole.
  • 29. However, functionality excludes diversity as it seeks to discipline the people into a homogenous group using the infrastructure for a specific purpose.
  • 30. Ideally, bridges serve as a solution to the lack of space and ease of transport. But the activities on the streets has simply duplicated street life in these infrastructures, a sort of a simulation of it.
  • 31. Whereas infrastructures strive to create order, they are also part of the cause of urban disorder. As it tends to dislocate people from urbanity, it has in turn created its own simulation of urban life, connecting different sorts of people along the way.
  • 32. The postmodern city is a product of capitalism; and to perceive the city as a social space is to sense the urgency of it being a site of social contradiction.
  • 33. Reading through Jameson’s “Hyperspace” Spaces have changed in order to adjust to human excess, which people have only appropriated for their own uses (or of what they have been previously accustomed to doing only in a different location altogether).
  • 34. Experiencing the postmodern city as that of a sequence of several overlapping images gives the effect of a disorderly city.
  • 35. Monuments as the national imaginarie
  • 36.
  • 37. Anitos dwell in the natives’ houses because they stand as representatives of those family members who have passed way,and that may serve as intermediarie between the God (Batala), and them (the natives).
  • 38. George Mosse Symbols are needed by nations, being the objectification of popular myths, giving a people their identity.
  • 39. The national monument as a means of self-expression served to anchor the national myths and symbols in the consciousness of the people.
  • 40. Monuments are not always ideal for a nation, as evidenced by the Philippine colonial experience where colonizers used it to augment their desires, as well as agendas for the colony. Legazpi-Urdaneta Monument (1891) City of Manila Carlos IV Monument (1808) Manila Cathedral
  • 41. Surpassing the lives of their own royalties, these stone monuments mark the Spaniards’ presence not only in the Philippines but in Mexico and Panama among others, as well as promote the ideals of the Mother country (colonizer).
  • 42. The Spaniards’ symbols – the monuments – have in fact portrayed people in victorious stances, to further promote the “conquistador” nature of the colonizers
  • 43. Both symbolize the cross or religion as both have the stance of a conquistador, an explorer holding a sword; meant to colonize and change (“civilize”) the people; the cross and the sword being the two pillars of Spanish misióncivilizatrice. Sto. Nino Legazpi-Urdaneta Monument
  • 44. American Monuments American monuments on the other hand, usually carry a book, are seen reading/studying, or even reading to someone else.
  • 45. These civic virtues, evidently portrayed in their monuments, show the significant shift from the Spanish style of wanting the natives to look up to them, to the Americans’ desire to mold the Filipinos to become the way they, the Americans, are.
  • 46.
  • 47. Apart from the theme of (children) reading together, there is the mother and child theme, prevalent in American period monuments
  • 48.
  • 49. Reading the Postcolonial Monuments Though supposed to show celebrations of freedom, they show sufferings, instead of portraying them as proud, noble people.
  • 51. Instead of celebrating freedom, these show celebration of defeat.
  • 52. The Sentinel of Freedom(Teodoro F. Valencia circle)
  • 53. Significance of Monuments We create objects of memory, or memories themselves, because there is none available at hand. Monuments tend to flesh out whatever it is we think that a nation should be, or even ourselves. We project ourselves onto monuments, too, thereby seeing our reflections in them.
  • 54. With the abuse of monuments – both by the viewer and the creator – a rampant phenomenon, we are threatened to have monuments which no longer hold any significance.
  • 55. The Urban and the Social The many borrowedstyles in our culture are very much evident, literally, in the streets, and as such, allows for an interdisciplinary reading of the urban. The Filipinos’ resourcefulness and ingenuity, despite the pervading problems and issues that he faces, show only the resilience of the Filipino spirit

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. With the billboards all over EDSA, EDSA itself has become a place where words and images clash and vie for power.
  2. With interpretations being freely given by each consumer, readings abound, losing the center of meaning.
  3. Stonino
  4. Rizal monument.
  5. Lapu-lapu monument