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Filipinos and their revolution : event, discourse, and historiography / Reynaldo C. Ileto.

By: Ileto, Reynaldo C.
Publisher: Quezon City : Ateneo de Manila University Press, c1998Description: xiii, 300 p. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9715502946.Subject(s): Philippines Historiography | Philippines History Revolution 1896 | Philippines History Revolution, 1896-1898 | Philippines History Revolution, 1896-1898 -- HistoriographyDDC classification: Fil 959.9026 Il3 1998
Contents:
Bernardo Carpio: Awit and revolution -- Rizal and the underside of Philippine history -- Rural life in a time of revolution -- Hunger in Southern Tagalog, 1897-1898 -- The revolution and the diaspora in Austral-Asia -- Orators and the crowd: independence politics, 1910-1914 -- The past in the present: Mourning the martyr ninoy -- The "Unfinished Revolution" in political discourse -- History and criticism: the invention of heroes -- Epilogue: Filipinos and their centennial.
Summary: "These collected essays depart from the usual narrative of the revolution as a progressive event leading to the establishment of a republic. They depict how separation from "Mother Spain" was imaginatively construed, what it meant for the church-center to be displaced by the nation-state, and the limits imposed by the failure of agriculture and the intervention of the United States. They also explore the intersection of revolutionary history, popular consciousness, and political events from the early decades of U.S. rule to the 1998 centennial celebration." "The author engages both Filipino and American scholarship and, opens new lines of research on Australian and Japanese connections with Philippine anticolonial movements. Moving between historical issues and theoretical problems, he encourages the reader to take local and national narratives seriously, to see them as meaningful, mutable, and linked in often unexpected ways to transnational narratives and concerns." "The book addresses key issues in Philippine history and politics, but will be of interest, as well, to students of comparative history, cultural theory, and historiography."--Jacket.
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Book Book High School Library
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Filipiniana Fil 959.9026 Il3 1998 (Browse shelf) 1 Available HS858
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Title Author Pages

Includes bibliographical references (p. 285-295) and index.

Bernardo Carpio: Awit and revolution -- Rizal and the underside of Philippine history -- Rural life in a time of revolution -- Hunger in Southern Tagalog, 1897-1898 -- The revolution and the diaspora in Austral-Asia -- Orators and the crowd: independence politics, 1910-1914 -- The past in the present: Mourning the martyr ninoy -- The "Unfinished Revolution" in political discourse -- History and criticism: the invention of heroes -- Epilogue: Filipinos and their centennial.

"These collected essays depart from the usual narrative of the revolution as a progressive event leading to the establishment of a republic. They depict how separation from "Mother Spain" was imaginatively construed, what it meant for the church-center to be displaced by the nation-state, and the limits imposed by the failure of agriculture and the intervention of the United States. They also explore the intersection of revolutionary history, popular consciousness, and political events from the early decades of U.S. rule to the 1998 centennial celebration." "The author engages both Filipino and American scholarship and, opens new lines of research on Australian and Japanese connections with Philippine anticolonial movements. Moving between historical issues and theoretical problems, he encourages the reader to take local and national narratives seriously, to see them as meaningful, mutable, and linked in often unexpected ways to transnational narratives and concerns." "The book addresses key issues in Philippine history and politics, but will be of interest, as well, to students of comparative history, cultural theory, and historiography."--Jacket.

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