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To sum up, we can say that the canon of Philippine literature in Spanish is formed with regard to social and political reasons related to nationalism, politics and a Westernized and elitist sense of what is ‘intellectual’ rather than to literary reasons.
- Rocío Ortuño Casanova
advertisement. THE SPANISH COLONIAL TRADITION. In 1521, when the Spaniards arrived at the archipelago that they were later to call. Filipinas, they found that the inhabitants lived in small and autonomous. communities, except in big centers ruled by the likes of the Sultan of Sulu or the. Rajah of Manila.
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Jul 21, 2021 · After three centuries of Spanish colonial rule, it was the Americans who introduced a Weberian model of bureaucracy in the Philippines that emulated their institutions back in the USA. The...
May 1, 2017 · Why does everyone know Claro M. Recto’s name in the Philippines but almost nobody has ever read his works? Following Pascale Casanova as well as some postulates by Pierre Bourdieu and Itamar Even-Zohar, the article outlines the complex linguistic reality in the Philippines at the beginning of the 20th century and traces the origins of the current literary canon of Philippine literature, as ...
- Rocío Ortuño Casanova
- 2017
tions: What colonial models did the Spanish establish in the Philippines? How was the exercise of power and participation in political and economic life organized?
Mar 9, 2007 · Politics, of course, is more than a numbers game, especially where the few have always ruled the many. Political change in the Philippines has historically been led by the middle class, from the Revolution against Spain of 1896 to the anti-Marcos struggle of the 1970s and the 1980s to the Edsa uprisings of 1986 and 2001.
Sep 5, 2023 · The development and vicissitudes of Philippine literature reflected the history of the Philippines as a nation. Spanish colonialism and the Filipino reaction paved the way for the emergence of