This review-essay discovers in the poems of E. San Juan, Jr. an evolving and passionate engagement with exile and hope. To be an exile, especially a Filipino exile, is not to be a tourist, idly consuming and colonizing, but to absorb languages and histories that console and inspire. Drawn from the lessons of decades of exile, the poems and the concluding essay confront injustice—the ways, for instance, in which oppressors colonize even time and space—and also envision a future when revolution replaces rootlessness, when migrants come home
During the second half of the twentieth century, in many Latin American countries, military dictator...
In an essay that he calls literary memory, the acclaimed writer in Filipino Efren Abueg provides a c...
This is a creative writing thesis entitled There is No Mathematics to Love and Loss- a novel that ex...
The review essay outlines the relationship between the planet and homeland as sites of unfreedom and...
In this synthetic introductory essay, I consider the places of E. San Juan, Jr. as gleaned from the ...
Focusing on E. San Juan, Jr.’s The Radical Tradition in Philippine Literature, which forms the matri...
The author has written an excellent summary of the little known events in Filipino history in the Ph...
Cultural displacement and exile are major topics that are portrayed in Caribbean literature and in t...
The exilic condition extends not only to the Filipino who has chosen to study or live abroad, or is ...
This study examines the concept of exile based on Bienvenido N. Santos novel What The Hell For You L...
In this article, I situate E. San Juan, Jr. as a key intellectual figure in the development of Filip...
Excerpt It is certainly safe to safe that Epifanio San Juan\u27s reputation rests on his literary cr...
F. Sionil Jose’s five interrelated Rosales Saga novels are interesting in that they provide insights...
The poems in Juan Luna\u27 s Revolver both address history and attempt to transcend it through their...
Exile is a dominant theme and trope in the poetry of the pioneer generation of Anglophone Malaysian ...
During the second half of the twentieth century, in many Latin American countries, military dictator...
In an essay that he calls literary memory, the acclaimed writer in Filipino Efren Abueg provides a c...
This is a creative writing thesis entitled There is No Mathematics to Love and Loss- a novel that ex...
The review essay outlines the relationship between the planet and homeland as sites of unfreedom and...
In this synthetic introductory essay, I consider the places of E. San Juan, Jr. as gleaned from the ...
Focusing on E. San Juan, Jr.’s The Radical Tradition in Philippine Literature, which forms the matri...
The author has written an excellent summary of the little known events in Filipino history in the Ph...
Cultural displacement and exile are major topics that are portrayed in Caribbean literature and in t...
The exilic condition extends not only to the Filipino who has chosen to study or live abroad, or is ...
This study examines the concept of exile based on Bienvenido N. Santos novel What The Hell For You L...
In this article, I situate E. San Juan, Jr. as a key intellectual figure in the development of Filip...
Excerpt It is certainly safe to safe that Epifanio San Juan\u27s reputation rests on his literary cr...
F. Sionil Jose’s five interrelated Rosales Saga novels are interesting in that they provide insights...
The poems in Juan Luna\u27 s Revolver both address history and attempt to transcend it through their...
Exile is a dominant theme and trope in the poetry of the pioneer generation of Anglophone Malaysian ...
During the second half of the twentieth century, in many Latin American countries, military dictator...
In an essay that he calls literary memory, the acclaimed writer in Filipino Efren Abueg provides a c...
This is a creative writing thesis entitled There is No Mathematics to Love and Loss- a novel that ex...