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  1. Ironically, the need to view Rizal as a Realist stems largely from the prejudices of traditional Spanish literary criticism in that there is an inclination to dismiss almost eve- rything between the Golden Age and Realism.

  2. Falqueza, Francesca T., "Touching The Truth: Applying Literary Realist Theory to Jose Rizal's “Noli Me Tangere” (Touch Me Not)" (2009). Theses and Dissertations - UTB/UTPA. 974.

  3. The paper shall use Jose Rizal’s novels as a summative reference to the allegorical, historical and philosophical significance of time, textual meaning, fiction and past-to-present day reality to understand the predicament of reader of history/literature as interpreter and reader of history-literature alluded to as the significant other ...

  4. The most difficult criteria by which to judge Rizal's success as a novelist is that of style. Rizal's books were written in Spa- nish, the florid and romantic Spanish of his day.

  5. For his part, Luna defended Rizal’s work by situating it in the context of the European novel’s evolution from classicism to romanticism to realism. Putting Rizal in the company of Hugo, Balzac, Flaubert, Zola, and Maupassant, Luna praised Rizal’s “extraordinary realism” in capturing the dynamics of a society’s development.

  6. Apr 25, 2023 · But back in the Philippines in 1896, the most important piece to the revolution was arguably a polymath named Jose Rizal, and the two novels he wrote.

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  8. Feb 4, 2021 · The gradual abandonment of Spanish language in the Philippines and the peripheral situation of Philippine literature in Spanish on the map of Hispanic literatures have also contributed to this anomalous view on Rizal’s main novel.

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