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  1. 4 days ago · April 2013--Constructing the Filipina: A History of Women’s Magazines from 1891-2002 by Georgina Reyes Encanto is a first attempt to record the history of Women’s magazines in the historical-feminist perspective. The author herself is the former Dean of Mass Communication and a Journalism professor in the University of the Philippines.

  2. In the 19th century, Filipina women faced various challenges due to the social, economic, and political conditions of the time. One of the main challenges for Filipina women in the 19th century was the limited access to education and intellectual opportunities. Education was often reserved for elite families and males, leaving many women ...

  3. Jul 2, 2023 · GMA’s modern adaptation of Rizal’s Noli, Maria Clara at Ibarra, perfectly illustrates the backwardness of 19th century Philippines when it comes to the status of women. The character of Klay (played by Barbie Forteza), representing the lens of the modern progressive Filipina, is flabbergasted by the extent of Western patriarchy entrenched ...

  4. This canvass greatly defers from La Bulaqueña (the Woman from Bulacan, a Manila suburb), painted in 1895 in the Philippines, and which is actually often referred in the archipelago as Maria Clara, as it represents a mestiza woman standing humbly in a typical 19th century native upper-class dress.

    • Jean-Noël Sánchez
  5. Mar 12, 2024 · By Gelaine Louise Gutierrez. In 19th century Manila, a cadre of Filipino women challenged tradition and broke the boundaries of domestic life. Beyond the kitchen walls and household duties, these women became resilient contributors to the city's dynamic landscape, defying the widely held belief that their jobs were limited to household duties.

  6. [5] Maria Luisa Camagay, Working Women of Manila in the 19th Century, (Philippines: University of the Philippines Press, 1995). [6] Ibid. [7] Laura R. Prieto, "Bibles, Baseball and Butterfly Sleeves: Filipina Women and American Protestant Missions, 1900–1930.”

  7. Mar 20, 2024 · Jules Montano, a foreign visitor in the 19th century, was amazed when he saw the massive number of cigarreras exiting a factory for the day (there were 30,000 by the end of the 19th century). Three of the four tabacaleras in Manila hired only women, for their deftness and honesty; but this did not mean the cigarreras were subservient and easily ...

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