Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life

Towards the end of his writing career, Bienvenido Santos published two autobiographies, Memory’s Fictions and Postscript to Saintly Life—a departure in a writing life mostly devoted to penning fictional works. This paper focuses on the last autobiography which mainly looks at Santos’s experiences as...

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Main Author: Labayne, Ivan Emil A.
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Published: Animo Repository 2023
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol3/iss1/2
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1046/viewcontent/1_Labayne.pdf
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:akda-10462024-01-15T11:37:09Z Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life Labayne, Ivan Emil A. Towards the end of his writing career, Bienvenido Santos published two autobiographies, Memory’s Fictions and Postscript to Saintly Life—a departure in a writing life mostly devoted to penning fictional works. This paper focuses on the last autobiography which mainly looks at Santos’s experiences as a pensionado in America. It pays attention to how Santos writes about his Philippine home while in exile, taking part in a program that is part of the American colonial period. The range of Santos’s emotions—with shame and pride on both ends—while abroad is also examined. How these emotions were manifested in the book served as springboard to analyze Santos’s thoughts about his pensionado experience and locate hints of his insights regarding the fraught post-colonial relationship between the host-land America, and his homeland Philippines. The paper takes off from, and engages the postulations of Timothy Bewes about shame in postcolonial writing, and of Dylan Rodriquez about the violence inhering in the US–Philippine relations. The paper concludes by highlighting how Santos reaffirms the material force of writing, especially in the context of an exiled writer ceaselessly conjuring his native land, and pining for his return. 2023-04-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol3/iss1/2 info:doi/10.59588/2782-8875.1046 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1046/viewcontent/1_Labayne.pdf Akda: The Asian Journal of Literature, Culture, Performance Animo Repository Philippine–American relations pensionado system diasporic writing autobiography post-colonialism Creative Writing Pacific Islands Languages and Societies Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Philippine–American relations
pensionado system
diasporic writing
autobiography
post-colonialism
Creative Writing
Pacific Islands Languages and Societies
Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
spellingShingle Philippine–American relations
pensionado system
diasporic writing
autobiography
post-colonialism
Creative Writing
Pacific Islands Languages and Societies
Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Labayne, Ivan Emil A.
Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
description Towards the end of his writing career, Bienvenido Santos published two autobiographies, Memory’s Fictions and Postscript to Saintly Life—a departure in a writing life mostly devoted to penning fictional works. This paper focuses on the last autobiography which mainly looks at Santos’s experiences as a pensionado in America. It pays attention to how Santos writes about his Philippine home while in exile, taking part in a program that is part of the American colonial period. The range of Santos’s emotions—with shame and pride on both ends—while abroad is also examined. How these emotions were manifested in the book served as springboard to analyze Santos’s thoughts about his pensionado experience and locate hints of his insights regarding the fraught post-colonial relationship between the host-land America, and his homeland Philippines. The paper takes off from, and engages the postulations of Timothy Bewes about shame in postcolonial writing, and of Dylan Rodriquez about the violence inhering in the US–Philippine relations. The paper concludes by highlighting how Santos reaffirms the material force of writing, especially in the context of an exiled writer ceaselessly conjuring his native land, and pining for his return.
format text
author Labayne, Ivan Emil A.
author_facet Labayne, Ivan Emil A.
author_sort Labayne, Ivan Emil A.
title Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
title_short Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
title_full Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
title_fullStr Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
title_full_unstemmed Lives Away from Home and Precarious Writing as Life: Reading Bienvenido Santos’s Postscript to Saintly Life
title_sort lives away from home and precarious writing as life: reading bienvenido santos’s postscript to saintly life
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2023
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol3/iss1/2
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1046/viewcontent/1_Labayne.pdf
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