Between empire and insurgency : the Philippines in the new millennium : essays in history, comparative literature, and cultural politics
Material type:
- 9789715427623
- PS 9993 S223
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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HRVVMC Library Filipiniana Books | Fil | PS 9993 S223 S26 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | FIL-0000107 |
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PS 9993 J67 1983 Mass : a novel | PS 9993 L24 L36 1981 Passion and compassion : mga tula sa Ingles at Pilipino | PS 9993 O54 2000 An embarassment of riches | PS 9993 S223 S26 2015 Between empire and insurgency : the Philippines in the new millennium : essays in history, comparative literature, and cultural politics | PS 99992.4 U53 2010 Underground spirit : Philippine short stories in English, 1973 to 1989 Vol 1 | PS 99992.4 U53 2010 Underground spirit : Philippine short stories in English, 1973 to 1989 Vol 2 | PZ 90.F55 E93 2021 Buklat/mulat : pagbasa at paglikha ng mga aklat pambata |
Includes bibliographic references
E. San Juan’s new work offers a continuation and elaboration of themes broached in his previous book published by UP Press, From Globalization to National Liberation. For both projects, the organizing motive is the sustained inquiry into the predicament of colonialism/neocolonialism and the quest for radical democratic transformation in the Philippines. The principles of historical materialism (articulated by Gramsci, Amado V. Hernandez, Renato Constantino, and others) inform the commentaries on authors, texts, and aesthetic discourses. Within the framework of globalization defined by the current imperial hegemony of the global North, the author investigates the process of the Filipino diaspora and its translation into fiction, reportage, and film. Original here are the observations on African-American internationalism, the current women’s liberation movement in the neocolonial formation, and the vicissitudes of the Moro people’s struggle for autonomy and self-determination. In anticipation of further research, the author initiates at pivotal conjunctures of the book a critique of the academic field of cultural studies and its prospect after the 2008 crisis of “shock” or disaster capitalism and its ecosystemic reverberations in the second decade of the new millennium.
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