Dr. Felipe Landa Jocano, Sr., born in Cabatuan, Iloilo in 1930, was one of the Philippines’ pioneering anthropologists and a key figure in documenting Filipino culture and history. Despite financial hardships, he pursued education in Manila, Arellano High School. and Bachelor’s degree in Literature at the Central Philippine University in Iloilo, eventually earning advanced degrees in Anthropology from the University of Chicago. He is known for his fieldwork on the Hinilawod epic of the Panay Bukidnon and for co-leading the discovery of the Oton Death Mask, a significant archaeological find. Jocano introduced participant observation in Philippine research and challenged existing migration theories with his Core Population Theory, emphasizing a gradual cultural evolution in Southeast Asia. As a professor and director at the University of the Philippines, he helped shape the Philippine Studies graduate program and authored widely used educational texts.
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Central Philippine University alumni, Core Population Theory, Felipe Landa Jocano, Filipino anthropologist, Filipino culture documentation, Filipino historian, Filipino migration theories, Hinilawod epic research, Iloilo notable figures, Oton Death Mask discovery, Panay Bukidnon culture, participant observation Philippines, Philippine anthropology pioneer, Philippine archaeologist, Philippine cultural evolution, , Philippine Studies program, Southeast Asian cultural history, University of Chicago anthropology, University of the Philippines anthropology
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