"A collection of poems on Masbateno identity and culture."
The Scholarly Mandate
This work represents the culminated honors portfolio in the Department of Language, Literature and the Arts. Incorporating active linguistic fieldwork across Masbate's coastlines, ranchers, and gold mining arteries.
This research explores the intricate, fluid layers of Masbateno identity by utilizing creative ethnopoetry to map how traditional songs, vocations, and colloquial vocabularies are stored. At its core, the thesis investigates the Bisácol tongue—a complex, localized dialect contact zone that merges Central Philippine languages (Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Waray, and Bikol Sorsoganon) into a rich hybrid register.
By refusing to romanticize subaltern labors, these verses actively record the dirt-stained realities of Milagros grasslands cattle herdsmen, the vulnerable pocket gold-panners in Aroroy streams, and the maritime struggles of Burias Island fishers. The result is an interactive poetic archive that functions as a living document of language preservation.
This thesis compiles and analyzes six original poems that encapsulate Masbateno identity, cultural heritage, and regional resistance. Anchored in Walter Ong’s oral theory and Gayatri Spivak’s studies of subaltern agency, the study examines the tripartite division of Masbate (Masbate Mainland, Ticao Island, and Burias Island). Ultimately, the collection argues that poetic dialectological archives provide crucial defense points against colonial historical amnesia and environmental degradation caused by multinational mining programs and commercial tourism labels.
Ini na panaliksik nagalangkob sa mga binalaybay kag inistorya san isla, agud pabilinhon kag salbaron an lumad na lengguwahe kag kultura san mga namasbate. Ginapakita didi an talagsahon na dila san Bisácol—an pagsalakpao san Bikol Sorsoganon, Hiligaynon, Waray, kag Sugbuanon na nagtukod san aton pamatasan sa panginabuhi. Paagi san pulong, ginasukol an pagkawala san aton maragtas sa tunga san dagkong makina san Aroroy, asoge sa sapa san Guinobatan, kag asero san Rodeo sa Milagros. Buhi an katutubong dila san mga katigulangan!
Meg Ruth Macabuhay Rodriguez's theoretical architecture maps Masbate identity at the crossroads of verbal performance, dialect hybridization, and spatial defense. Click different nodes to inspect research inputs.
The Poetic Archive (Grade 1.0)
The critical study where empirical creative output acts as a central vocabulary holder. Meg Rodriguez's collected verses actively retrieve verbal histories, synthesize the complex Bisácol tongue layers, and assert cultural survival.
The Province of Masbate consists of three distinct islands, each generating a unique socio-economic dialect and poetry register. Click each island area below to explore its specific geocultural coordinates.
This region represents the physical home-center of local industry and folklore. Here, the traditional cattle pasture hand ('cowboy') is stripped of Western Hollywood romance, framing instead the labor of subaltern herdsmen, and the environmental changes of open-pit gold miners.
At its core, "An Inistorya san Isla" acts as a live oral preservation lab. Choose standard transcribed Bisácol verses below, tap to launch the Immersive Reader Modal, record your voice recitations, and download uncompressed files.
archival epoch: June 2025
Fieldwork Recording Interface
Analyze the phonetic weight and vowel patterns of Bisácol by recording your vocal reading here. Save recordings to compare phonetic differences between island zones.
Launch Recording Console
Requires microphone access
Recitation Successfully Archived
Format: Web Audio Stereo Input Device
This metric illustrates the ratio frequency of core semantic motifs identified across Meg Rodriguez's collected verses. Click any bar metric to unlock critical scholastic commentary.
As Meg prepares for the prestigious Bikol 2026 Writing Fellowship Program (VLF Bikol WFP), this interactive sandbox acts as an incubator. Here, her ethnopoetic field records transition from static verse to raw, dramatic conflicts for the stage, under her creative agency at the family business venture Muse Lab .
A makeshift bamboo shelter overlying the muddy brown banks of the Guinobatan River, Aroroy. Night. A rusty kerosene gas torch flickers, casting long yellow shadows.
The linguistic and class friction between local Bisácol panning terminologies and corporate Tagalog/English.
Meg anchors her stage work inside MetaThriving Muse Lab, prototyping surround soundscapes. Click below to play real synthesized atmospheric frequency triggers—evoking localized raw sounds!
Modify the scene dialogue lines below. Write character names in ALL CAPS on their own line to trigger professional stage layouts.
Fellowship applications require a narrative pitch explaining how your project addresses local socio-economic truths. Draft her statement to save and export.
This honors thesis successfully navigated oral examinations at the University of the Philippines Baguio, receiving the highest grade of 1.0.
Professor of Comparative Literature
THESIS ADVISOR & COMMITTEE CHAIR
Associate Professor of Linguistics
DIALECTOLOGY EXTERNAL EXAMINER
Chair, DLLA
DEPARTMENT RATIFIER & DEAN
Masbate Maritime Atlas
Meg graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Language and Literature (BALL) at the University of the Philippines Baguio (June 2025). Her thesis got the highest grade of 1.0. We are preparing for its submission to local museum archive--
"To speak of the island's history (An Inistorya san Isla) is to recognize that our native words carry weight against erasure. This outstanding 1.0 grade belongs entirely to the small gold panners of Aroroy and the deep-sea fishers of Ticao who permitted me to record their voices, preserving a lineage that will never fade."
University of the Philippines Baguio Preservation Citation
Rodriguez, M. R. M. (2025). An Inistorya san Isla: A collection of poems on Masbateno identity and culture (Bachelor's Thesis, Department of Language, Literature and the Arts, University of the Philippines Baguio). Awarded with Highest Outstanding Grade of 1.0.
@phdthesis{rodriguez2025inistorya,
title={An Inistorya san Isla: A collection of poems on Masbateno identity and culture},
author={Rodriguez, Meg Ruth Macabuhay},
school={University of the Philippines Baguio},
year={2025},
month={June},
department={Department of Language, Literature and the Arts},
type={Bachelor's Thesis},
note={Awarded with the Highest Outstanding Grade of 1.0}
}
Department of Language, Literature and the Arts (DLLA) • College of Arts and Communications (CAC)
Traditional Scholarly Lineage Metadata: Core poem description details load dynamically here.
DLLA Department of Language, Literature and the Arts • College of Arts and Communications