Her father is from Angono, Rizal and her mother is from Tadian, Mt. She introduced herself as a half-Igorot and half-Tagalog. To anyone looking for reading materials about the Igorots, I highly suggest he/she visits the library of the University of the Philippines in Baguio or the bookstore at the Museo Kordilyera (also inside the UP Baguio campus).Īround November of last year, I received an email from a student currently studying at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines. Want to read about the art of Kalinga tattooing? Analyn Salvador-Amores has you covered. Want to read about pre-colonial and colonial Igorots? Read the books by William Henry Scott and Albert Jenks. There's a good number of non-fiction books out there that cover Igorot-related topics from our history starting from the arrival of the Spaniards to our cultural traditions (then and now). When it comes to non-fiction books about Igorots, I have quite a pile to recommend. These requests are usually due to them burdened with an assignment or a research project the completion of which requires them to accumulate knowledge about certain aspects of "the Igorot". Courtesy of this blog, every now and then I would receive an email, mostly from university students, asking for recommendations with regards to books about Igorots.
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