Filipinos and
their revolution : event, discourse, and historiography / Reynaldo C.
Ileto. - Quezon city : Ateneo de Manila university press, 1998. -
XIII-300 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN 971-550-294-6
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NOTE DE L'ÉDITEUR : 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. How have contested readings or revolutionary
events and heros underpinned differing ways of defining and being
« Filipinos » and how have these been embraced
and deployed by both the state and its critics ?
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CONTENTS |
Preface
- 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
Endnotes, References, Index |
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COMPLÉMENT BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE | - « Magindanao,
1860-1888 : the career of Datu Uto of Buayan », Ithaca
(N.Y.) : Cornell university, 1971 ; Manila : Anvil, 2007
- « Pasyon
and revolution : popular movements in the Philippines,
1840-1910 », Quezon city : Ateneo de Manila university
press, 1979
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mise-à-jour : 21 novembre 2007 |
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