Discipline: Literature
Fog-bathed Baguio vaporizes in time because of rapid urbanization, inward
migration, population pressure, environmental degradation, and natural calamities
revising mist-borne Baguio ethnoscape before materializing in the hinterlands of
the unconscious as melting pot of cultures, artist’s lair, Summer Capital, Colonial
Hill Station, Ibaloi homeland, fruit and vegetable paradise, flower hub, and ukayukay
county.
In the 1992 Preface of “Cartography: A Collection of Poetry in Baguio,”
Maria Luisa Aguilar-Cariño (now Ma. Luisa Igloria) wrote, “The older generation
who remember what Baguio was like before urbanization speak of the special character
that the city had, which old photographs still have the power to evoke. (However),
subdivision planners have taken over many of the remaining spaces in the city, cutting
down more pine trees each year, and totally changing the face of the city. I want to give
my children and others, through my poetry, a sense of what it was like before.”
This paper examines Luisa-Aguilar-Cariño’s poetic refraction and imaginative
representation of Pines City, Baguio by employing Gaston Bachelard’s “Poetic of Space”
in analyzing Cariños “Old World,” I argue that the transitory images such as tongues
of smoke, rain of fire, September sunshine, canopy of breasts, etc. associatively evoke
the city’s fragility.