DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4
Hits 1 – 20 of 69

1
La diversidad cultural y su gestión en Filipinas ; Cultural Diversity and its Management in the Philippines
Donoso, Isaac. - : Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida (Venezuela), 2022
BASE
Show details
2
Baybayin: The Role of a Written Language in the Cultural Identity and Socio-Psychological Well-Being of Filipinos
BASE
Show details
3
Vaccine Hesitancy and the Cultural Politics of Trust in the Dengvaxia Controversy: A Critical Discourse-Ethnographic Study of Online News Content, Producers, and Audiences
In: ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies ; 13 ; 2 ; 1-8 (2021)
BASE
Show details
4
Echoing + Resistant Imagining: Filipino Student Writing Under American Colonial Rule
In: Doctoral Dissertations (2021)
BASE
Show details
5
Promoting Spanish Language in the Philippines: Politics, Representations, and Discourses
In: Forma y Función, Vol 34, Iss 2 (2021) (2021)
BASE
Show details
6
Análisis de los discursos presidenciales de Filipinas desde la perspectiva crítica del discurso: el caso de G. M. Arroyo y B. Aquino
Bigcas, Samantha Louise. - : Universitat Politècnica de València, 2021
BASE
Show details
7
Interview with Professor John Wolff
: Southeast Asia Program, 2020
BASE
Show details
8
Notes from the Field: Inagta Alabat: A moribund Philippine language, with supporting audio
Lobel, Jason William; Alpay, Amy Jugueta; Barreno, Rosie Susutin. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2020
BASE
Show details
9
Notes from the Field: Inagta Alabat: A moribund Philippine language, with supporting audio
Lobel, Jason William; Alpay, Amy Jugueta; Barreno, Rosie Susutin. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2020
BASE
Show details
10
Notes from the Field: Remontado (Hatang-Kayi): A Moribund Language of the Philippines
Lobel, Jason William; Surbano, Orlando Vertudez. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
11
Notes from the Field: Remontado (Hatang-Kayi): A Moribund Language of the Philippines
Lobel, Jason William; Surbano, Orlando Vertudez. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
12
CUSSING AMONG THE KANKANAEY YOUTH
In: Cadernos de Linguagem e Sociedade; v. 20 n. 2 (2019): Fluxo contínuo; 254-269 ; 2179-4790 ; 0104-9712 ; 10.26512/les.v20i2 (2019)
BASE
Show details
13
The Archaeological Investigation of Rock Art in the Philippines ...
Jalandoni, Andrea. - : Griffith University, 2018
BASE
Show details
14
The Archaeological Investigation of Rock Art in the Philippines
Jalandoni, Andrea. - : Griffith University, 2018
BASE
Show details
15
"Hindi Bayani/not a hero": the linguistic landscape of protest in Manila
In: Social Inclusion ; 5 ; 4 ; 14-28 ; Multilingualism and social inclusion (2018)
BASE
Show details
16
Remittance Fiction: Human Labor Export, Realism, and the Filipino Novel in English
Nadal, Paul Imatong. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
In: Nadal, Paul Imatong. (2017). Remittance Fiction: Human Labor Export, Realism, and the Filipino Novel in English. UC Berkeley: Rhetoric. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/446335bp (2017)
Abstract: “Remittance Fiction: Human Labor Export, Realism, and the Filipino Novel in English,” argues that anglophone writers became part of the worldwide dispersion of Filipinos through international educational exchange systems, and that their overseas literary production helped to reproduce the figure of the “overseas Filipino” as a subject and object of national development. Combining world-systems analysis with a rhetorically-oriented analysis of literary style, the dissertation pursues a double investigation. First, it constructs a genealogy of realism in the Philippine anglophone novel rooted in the twentieth-century evolution of the Philippines from an agricultural economy to a financialized economy built on labor export and migrant remittances. Second, it examines the conditions of this economic transformation through a formalist analysis of literary texts I call “remittance fiction,” that is, works produced out of the writer’s overseas experience and valorized at home as national literature.Each chapter seeks to establish the dialectic between realism, nationalism, and the remaking of the Filipino by the state as “human capital,” by focusing on the literary remittances of Juan C. Laya, Edilberto K. Tiempo, N. V. M. Gonzalez, Nick Joaquin, Bienvenido N. Santos, Wilfrido D. Nolledo, and Ninotchka Rosca. Chapter 1 analyzes how Laya’s His Native Soil adapted the bildungsroman to develop a realist prose style capable of capturing the contradictory requirements of US-directed free trade under the commonwealth transition to independence. Chapter 2—through an analysis of Tiempo’s literary criticism, Joaquin’s The Woman Who Had Two Navels, and Gonzalez’s A Season of Grace and The Bamboo Dancers—examines the importation of New Criticism into the Philippines in the context of postwar import-substituting industrialization, a process enabled by the expatriate writer’s overseas training in creative writing through programs such as Paul Engle’s Iowa Writers’ Workshop and Wallace Stegner’s Stanford Creative Writing Program. Chapter 3 historicizes the increasing dominance of the historical novel after 1965 by situating Santos’s Villa Magdalena, Nolledo’s But for the Lovers, and Rosca’s State of War in relation to the decline of import-substitution and the rise of the new remittance economy under Ferdinand E. Marcos’s labor export program. Articulating the relations between literary and economic histories, the dissertation tells the story of how Filipino English writers imagined their relation to the nation, how the state itself envisioned them as nation-builders and transnational mediators, and how international cultural organizations provided the transpacific institutional matrix within which remittance fictions were produced and integrated into economic and literary world-systems defined by combined and uneven development.
Keyword: Asian American studies; Global Anglophone; Literary History; Literature; Novel; Philippines; Remittances; Rhetoric
URL: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/446335bp
BASE
Hide details
17
Remittance Fiction: Human Labor Export, Realism, and the Filipino Novel in English
Nadal, Paul Imatong. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
BASE
Show details
18
The dark side of electoralism: opinion polls and voting in the 2016 Philippine presidential election
In: Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs ; 35 ; 3 ; 15-38 ; The early Duterte presidency in the Philippines (2017)
BASE
Show details
19
Prompted and Unprompted Self-Repairs of Filipino Students of Spanish as a Foreign Language
Sibayan, Anna Marie. - : Universitat de Barcelona, 2017
In: TDX (Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa) (2017)
BASE
Show details
20
Prompted and Unprompted Self-Repairs of Filipino Students of Spanish as a Foreign Language
Sibayan, Anna Marie. - : Universitat de Barcelona, 2017
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4

Catalogues
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
69
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern