Abstract
In this paper, the famous Bikolano folk way of healing called
Santigwar
is reconstructed as a procedure of social critique which was ideationally made
possible by Kristian Cordero’s metaphorical configuration of its practice from
healing a sick body to a poetics of social diagnosis. The legitimacy of this effortis grounded on the normative significance of the practice of santigwar toBikolanos in the present and its historical background of conversion andresistance in Bikol. It is argued that while santigwar, in Cordero, is a literarypiece for social healing, it could likewise serve as a local concept for socialcritique refurbished with the conceptual tools borrowed from the recognitivetheory of Axel Honneth. Santigwar captures in literary imagination the brand ofsocial criticism called immanent critique geared for freedom yet grounded innormativity. Hence pagsantigwar sa banwaan becomes a philosophical praxis ofsocial healing performed for social emancipation
—using Fenella Cannell’s
terminology of the ethnographic value of santigwar to Bikolanos
—for a “peoplewho have nothing.”