Monday, 10 March 2008

Binibining Janina and her majesty's 'Living English'

So-called ‘English communication skills experts’ in the Philippines are having a field day mocking the newly crowned Binibining Pilipinas-World, Janina San Miguel.  I must admit that I too cringed at the thought of her representing the Philippines in the world's oldest and biggest beauty pageant to be held in October this year. The video clip of her Q and A during the pageant is of course the current object of mockery and derision among (pwede bang amongst para beauty pageant patty?) Filipinos back home and in diaspora.

While struggling to write my analysis and discussion for my independent research project, I thought of scribbling down my two cents worth on this matter (which is embarrassingly of great importance to people who regard pageants as part of their communal dreaming!):

Well, Janina San Miguel’s utterance is what some applied linguists would call ‘living English’. I’d say it is an example of English in use by ‘subalterns’ or ‘postcolonial subjects’.  At best, it is a modest form of resistance against the colonial tongue (I kind of loved it when she maintained her poise and exuded that annoying smugness – or should I call it chutzpah? – after her last clause, ‘…but I said dot (with emphasis) my pamily is the most important persons (very alliterative!) in my (with matching prolonged diphthong [ai]) life’). Janina has disturbingly ‘recontextualized’ English – has ‘colonized’ it so to speak – to the consternation of those who adhere to the unstable notion that there is only one way of speaking English, and that is, by using the Standard World English (which is a very contentious construct anyway.).

I would have loved, though, to see a more radical form of resistance in Binibining Pilipinas Beauty Pageant which seems to put a lot of premium on English speaking skills (On the contrary, international beauty pageants do not necessarily require English proficiency. The last two Miss Universe winners – from Puerto Rico and Japan – had atrocious English skills when they won. Puerto Rico’s English was horrible in her interview clip in the Miss U website but she won, anyway. She spoke Spanish on the pageant night.).I would have been very impressed if the 17-year old Janina spoke in Taglish or used code meshing the way Binibining Pilipinas World Marilen Espino did in the national pageant in 1992. That would have been very ‘revolutionary’ of Janina. And that would have been, to my mind, permissible since she is not in the context of an English classroom with an English teacher warped in shaky paradigms of second language teaching. Hahahaha!

I guess Janina just didn’t have the presence of mind or didn’t have the character to rock the ‘establishment’ during the pageant. Seriously, Janina should just have been given the first-runner up honors because that means she can still compete in the future and be better prepared for the Q and A. Or she should have just been given a Binibining Pilipinas International title since Miss International just requires delegates to present prepared speeches during the pageant. But then, the decision has been made and whether ‘English-loving’ Filipinos like it or not, she is going to represent the Philippines in Miss World in Ukraine (barring unforeseen circumstances, of course). She is one lucky bi…girl!

Go Janina! Go for Miss World! You have my support (as if it mattered.)! Hahaha!

37 comments:

  1. i was expecting this post sir gene, really. haha. but yea, she could have used tagalog na lang sana. mas ok sana yun!

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  2. She is the mimilanie marquez of our generation. I like underdogs. Pag nanalo siya overseas, luluhod ang mga tala. Pag natalo siya, magiging bold star siya at luluhod ang mga kalalakihan! Hahaha!

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  3. hi sir gene! i knew it! i knew that you wouldn't let this moment pass by without commenting on the issue! two of your favorite things: language and beauty pageants...impossibleng hindi nayanig ang world ni sir gene! haha!

    it was only more painful for me when i found that she is a MassComm student...waah. :(

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  4. hi gene! i like the way you made sense of that episode, and your "if/then" predictions... beauty queen or bold star?? whatever the case, may luluhod! hahahaha!

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  5. ^^^monster na ang link ni irvin gawa nito. naku. all your former students probably first thought of you when this happened. i did. grabe. gusto ko ako ang gumawa ng paraan...para sa bayan!

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  6. Don't you worry hija. Noli de Castro, who is a graduate of UE (the same university where Janina comes from) and who had been in the broadcast communications industry before becoming senator, appears to have shaky English (I'm not even sure how to describe it. Of course, his English has improved through time.). And where he is now? He's Vice President and is going to be President should GMA be booted out of office.
    Seriously, pageants need not be taken seriously. They have to be enjoyed. Take it from me. Hahahaha!

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  7. Hi pam. Either way, luluhod din ang mga baklang nag-ma-mock sa kanya. Hahahaha.

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  8. I am not aware of that irvin link and I didn't quite get the last line. What do you mean by that hija?

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  9. gusto ko syang sakalin, para ung runner up na lang.

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  10. Hahaha. Danielle Castano was my bet. Vavavoom. I just love her. She's a cross between Anjanette Abayari and Zizi Lee (Miss Aruba and Miss World 2001 first runner-up). I was so disappointed when she didn't get one of the crowns. In hindsight though, I think she's not one lucky bitch like Ms Janina. She can still compete though in the coming years and hopefully, bag the Miss Universe crown.

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  11. Hahaha! I like. :D

    I wonder how she feels with her popularity now. She's all over the net and even on the radio. :)

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  12. So true! Grabe, I cant believe she won. She badly needs to redeem herself. :)

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  13. Loved the 'living English' framework you used here. Hehe. Have never really thought beauty pageants could be a rich source of linguistic 'resistance' and pageant beauties 'revolutionaries' in terms of throwing off dominant linguistic paradigms. Bakit nga nde, di ba? Should pay more attention now. Hehe. Also really loved your prose. :)

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  14. tita mary and tito eloy were wondering on what you had to say about this, hahaha! baka daw kalbuhin mo sarili sa sobrang loka!

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  15. This is dissertation material, Gene! ... Hehe... Stay happy each day...

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  16. Gene, I just saw the clip. OMG! Iba sya!

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  17. Gene, Mild and I just watched the clip. Tama si Aileen, iba siya! hahaha That was a real winner. But what's sad for me (of course, as an applied linguist myself) is the seeming arrogance of most comments. Proficiency in English and being smart? She's one damn pretty lady, Gene. And that's all that matters -- I think she's got heart too! Magandang example ito for a sociopolitical analysis ah! you can juxtapose this with that thing with the Fernandez writer who said something about OFW's. Forgot the specifics. Mukhang may tama din yung mga sinasabi ko about language and class hehehe I think that's what's wrong Pinas, di ba? Akala ng marami saviour ang English :)

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  18. I love this post!

    Now don't you just wish you could do an ISM on this subject? ;p ;p ;p

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  19. Hi Aileen and Sir Topsie, napaiisip tuloy ako kung dapat paltan ko na lang ang aking proposal and do something on beauty pageants. Hahaha. Kaya lang baka mataranta si Dr. Lazar, biglang batuhin ako ng kanyang libro on Feminist discourse studies! Hahaha!

    Sir Tops, I definitely agree with what you said. Janina represents the subject position of the marginalized. Her victory makes the so-called intellectual elite go nuts and that's what makes her more endearing!

    Lorie, napaisip ako dun. Too late though. My deadline is on April 2. Hahaha.

    Jeni, I actually considered that as a potential topic for dissertation...Hmmm. I'm torn(ed). Hahaha!

    Heidi, sabihin mo kay tito eloy and mama mary, hello! Pasabi din that I'm the number one supporter of Janina San Miguel dahil fan ako ni Mimilanie Marquez, the most beautiful Miss International from 1960 to 2000!

    Brian, tingin ka lang sa ceiling. Mawawala yan! Haha!

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  20. Hi thea! I'm so honored to have been visited by a Miss Bicolandia! Mabuhay ka and let's support Janina! (Siguro you were rooting for Tabetha. Well, she has a chance of competing again. Perhaps, in 2010. Honestly, she redeemed the pageant with her answer, although I hated her fake accent. Hahaha!)

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  21. *chargined* *tango tango* slightly enlightened pero ayoko talaga. haha. ayoko. marami maganda dun eh...

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  22. yeah. i definitely agree sir. jan siya nagkulang. apir! apir!

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  23. naghanap talaga ng kalampi si irvin. haha. kasi outnumbered sya sa thread nya. haha. kami lahat anti janina.

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  24. hi gene! actually hinanap ko talaga ang magiging blog entry mo tungkol sa subject na ito! grabe i enjoyed this entry so much kailangan ko basahin ng ilang ulit para ma-digest ko he he he....my take on this is that Janina should have answered in Filipino....sino ba kasing nagsabi na kailangan paduguin ang ilong sa pagsagot in English???

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  25. Hahaha. Hi Sir Gene! Panalo. :)

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  26. toldja he'd have two cents on this. haha.

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  27. Hi Ayie. Janina can justifiably speak Tagalog or Filipino (or even Taglish) during the Miss World Pageant should she be lucky enough to be included in the semifinal round. After all, it's the International Year of the Languages. She can start with (i-memorize nya na ito): 'Since we're celebrating the International Year of Languages, let me speak using my native tongue...' Tapos may excuse na siyang mag-tagalog, di vah?

    Her other option is to ask her UE speech professors to train her for her big event. I'd met some speech professors from UE in some conference in the late 90's back home and they gave me the impression that they are as anal as any Filipino embracing the language ideology that English is a superior language (impression ko lang naman). Perhaps, they can transform her into an Eliza Doolittle in seven months!

    Either way, she has my full support. Go Janina, go Janina, go!

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  28. haha. anal. *i'm sorry madaling araw pa sa pinas...*

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  29. Mimilanie Marquez defends Janina: "She blacked out, that doesn't make her bobo."

    “The humility she showed is one trait of a beauty queen,” Marquez said. She encouraged beauty title aspirants to speak in Filipino if they are not comfortable with English. “We’re in the Philippines; we’re entitled to speak in our native language. Let the foreign judges find ways to understand us.”

    Marquez herself has experienced being lampooned for flawed English. Her advice to Janina’s critics: “Before you criticize anyone, you should first give honor to our country.”

    read it on http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/entertainment/entertainment/
    view/20080312-124321/
    Melanie-Marquez-defends-Janina

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  30. panalo. me chance na si janina na magkalibro.

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  31. ikaw talaga naiisip ko sir nung nanonood ng youtube clips

    sana nga lumuhod ang mga tala!

    pero sa totoo lang sana nagtagalog na lang sya or nag "taglish" kung anong kaya nya, basta lang nasabi nya gusto nyang sabihin.

    anyway, amusing naman si ate. sabi nya sa showbiz central kahapon "wala po talaga akong pakialam basta po gagawin ko best ko for my contry and pamilee"

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  32. Sarah, it's good to hear from you - the grand pamangkin of a beauty queen herself (1972 Binibining Pilipinas Universe and Miss Universe semifinalist Armi Barbara Crespo)! Grabe na ito!

    Samahan mo ako sa pag-cheer kay Janina - ang pinakamagandang hayop sa balat ng Pilipinas ngayon! Hwag ka, baka ma-surpass niya ang achievement ng iyong lolah armi! Hahaha!

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  33. naku sir tumatak na talaga sa kaluluwa nyo ang connection namin haha. kung alam ko lang na makakakilala ko ng prof na obssessed sa pageant sana nakipagclose ako tuwing may mga reunion, para sa makarequest ako ng photo ops nyong dalawa. sa susunod may opportunity makikicloseness ako. dati kasi nagmamano lang at hihingi ng aguinaldo relation namin. minsan pala sasabihin nyang ang gaganda lang ng pamangkin nya hahaha



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  34. 'Living English'... interesting! It's somewhat related to what i read in Chinua Achebe's notion of a 'new English', "an English which is at once universal and able to carry his (or her) peculiar experience" (Achebe, 433) and his argument that one does not have to use English like a native speaker.

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