Hoy! Tsinoy Ako!: An Ethnographic Analysis of the Representation of the Tsinoy in Philippine Television: Difference between revisions
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ABSTRACT | ABSTRACT | ||
This study seeks to analyze the politics of the representation of young Tsinoys in Philippine television. This will be framed using an ethnographic inquiry based on the incongruence of my experiences growing up as a Tsinoy vis-à-vis the portrayal of young Tsinoys in Philippine television. | |||
George Herbert Mead’s Symbolic Interactionism will be used as the framework for this study, particularly his discourse on how needs of certain groups are identified by their experiences. There is also a brief discussion on the concept of one’s identity based on nation. Edward Said’s Orientalism will be used as the concepts of othering and exoticization are useful in the analysis of representation. This thesis employs textual analysis of the television series My Binondo Girl as a text. The study also uses ethnography through a personal narrative of my construction of my identity as a Tsinoy. Therefore, I will undertake this study as a phenomenological project, i.e., both as a researcher and as a subject. | |||
This thesis discusses the background of the image of Tsinoys in Philippine society and interrogates the politics behind how Tsinoys are represented in Philippine television. The study aims to identify and assess what I assert as a misrepresentation of Tsinoys by comparing and contrasting it alongside my experiences of the formation of my own identity as a Tsinoy. In doing so, the study intends to criticize the commodification of the concept of being Tsinoy, as well as to prove how the portrayal of Tsinoys on television perpetuates myths about the group. | |||
Sy, S.G.C. (2012). Hoy! Tsinoy ako! An ethnographic analysis of the Tsinoy in Philippine television, Unpublished Undergraduate Thesis, University of the Philippines, College of Mass Communication. | Sy, S.G.C. (2012). Hoy! Tsinoy ako! An ethnographic analysis of the Tsinoy in Philippine television, Unpublished Undergraduate Thesis, University of the Philippines, College of Mass Communication. | ||
[https://iskomunidad.upd.edu.ph/flipbooks/tsinoyrep.548/ view thesis] | |||
Keywords: Tsinoy, Chinese-Filipino, representation, identity, exoticization, Kim Chiu | |||
[[Category:CMC Thesis]][[Category:Department of Broadcast Communication Thesis]][[Category:Theses]] |
Latest revision as of 12:51, 16 June 2022
ABSTRACT
This study seeks to analyze the politics of the representation of young Tsinoys in Philippine television. This will be framed using an ethnographic inquiry based on the incongruence of my experiences growing up as a Tsinoy vis-à-vis the portrayal of young Tsinoys in Philippine television.
George Herbert Mead’s Symbolic Interactionism will be used as the framework for this study, particularly his discourse on how needs of certain groups are identified by their experiences. There is also a brief discussion on the concept of one’s identity based on nation. Edward Said’s Orientalism will be used as the concepts of othering and exoticization are useful in the analysis of representation. This thesis employs textual analysis of the television series My Binondo Girl as a text. The study also uses ethnography through a personal narrative of my construction of my identity as a Tsinoy. Therefore, I will undertake this study as a phenomenological project, i.e., both as a researcher and as a subject.
This thesis discusses the background of the image of Tsinoys in Philippine society and interrogates the politics behind how Tsinoys are represented in Philippine television. The study aims to identify and assess what I assert as a misrepresentation of Tsinoys by comparing and contrasting it alongside my experiences of the formation of my own identity as a Tsinoy. In doing so, the study intends to criticize the commodification of the concept of being Tsinoy, as well as to prove how the portrayal of Tsinoys on television perpetuates myths about the group.
Sy, S.G.C. (2012). Hoy! Tsinoy ako! An ethnographic analysis of the Tsinoy in Philippine television, Unpublished Undergraduate Thesis, University of the Philippines, College of Mass Communication.
Keywords: Tsinoy, Chinese-Filipino, representation, identity, exoticization, Kim Chiu