Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria

This dissertation analyzes select poems of the multi-awarded Filipina poet Luisa Igloria and considers how they are able to do a poetic cartography of the Philippine nation as it exists in an archipelago of representations from/on the Philippines. It examines three major elements through which Phili...

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Main Author: Salcedo, Francis Xavier R.
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2017
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/497
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_doctoral-14962021-08-25T02:09:18Z Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria Salcedo, Francis Xavier R. This dissertation analyzes select poems of the multi-awarded Filipina poet Luisa Igloria and considers how they are able to do a poetic cartography of the Philippine nation as it exists in an archipelago of representations from/on the Philippines. It examines three major elements through which Philippine history and herstory have been shaped and contested: history, race and gender. It likewise explores how Luisa Igloria has entered into the discourse of things Philippine in her many poems which openly allude to and are overtly related with issues pertaining to the Philippine nation. As a Filipino living in the United States or in the belly of the beast figuratively speaking, it can likewise be said that Luisa Igloria is writing at one of the most potent centers of representation. Hence this dissertation performs close and discursive readings on Igloria's select poems in order to highlight themes like signifying practice, representation and critical intervention. The close reading of Igloria's poems is undertaken in the light of the style articulated by Helen Vendler and Marjorie Perloff - on which important elements of Luisa Igloria's poetry (Plot, Structure, Figurative Language and Theme) are identified and analyzed. A discourse analysis along the critical and foregrounded postcolonial points of Bill Ashcroft et al is likewise made after the close reading. In order to further clarify how Igloria's select poems are able to help identity, communicate and maintain a sense of national belonging despite being mere historical/herstorical fragments, this study also focuses on Thongchai Winichakul's book Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-Body of a Nation (1994) and E. San Juan's poetry collection Balikbayang Mahal: Passages from Exile (2008). Aside from pointing out that Igloria consciously used poetic devices to highlight issues on history, culture and gender in her poems, this study also reveals that Igloria employed contextual interventions as reflected in the chapters of this study. All in all, this study attests that Iglorias poems about things Philippine and the Filipino people are important milestones in scholarship and criticism of the Philippines - as a nation and as a people not because they provide something new, but because they provide a good occasion for a retrospective assessment of the Filipino nation and its enduring literary, cultural, and political identity in relation with and sometimes in opposition to its Spanish, American and Japanese colonizers. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/497 Dissertations English Animo Repository Philippine poetry (English) Poets, Filipino Cartography--Philippines--History Cartography in literature Igloria, Luisa A., 1961- Poems. Selections English Language and Literature
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
language English
topic Philippine poetry (English)
Poets, Filipino
Cartography--Philippines--History
Cartography in literature
Igloria, Luisa A., 1961- Poems. Selections
English Language and Literature
spellingShingle Philippine poetry (English)
Poets, Filipino
Cartography--Philippines--History
Cartography in literature
Igloria, Luisa A., 1961- Poems. Selections
English Language and Literature
Salcedo, Francis Xavier R.
Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
description This dissertation analyzes select poems of the multi-awarded Filipina poet Luisa Igloria and considers how they are able to do a poetic cartography of the Philippine nation as it exists in an archipelago of representations from/on the Philippines. It examines three major elements through which Philippine history and herstory have been shaped and contested: history, race and gender. It likewise explores how Luisa Igloria has entered into the discourse of things Philippine in her many poems which openly allude to and are overtly related with issues pertaining to the Philippine nation. As a Filipino living in the United States or in the belly of the beast figuratively speaking, it can likewise be said that Luisa Igloria is writing at one of the most potent centers of representation. Hence this dissertation performs close and discursive readings on Igloria's select poems in order to highlight themes like signifying practice, representation and critical intervention. The close reading of Igloria's poems is undertaken in the light of the style articulated by Helen Vendler and Marjorie Perloff - on which important elements of Luisa Igloria's poetry (Plot, Structure, Figurative Language and Theme) are identified and analyzed. A discourse analysis along the critical and foregrounded postcolonial points of Bill Ashcroft et al is likewise made after the close reading. In order to further clarify how Igloria's select poems are able to help identity, communicate and maintain a sense of national belonging despite being mere historical/herstorical fragments, this study also focuses on Thongchai Winichakul's book Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-Body of a Nation (1994) and E. San Juan's poetry collection Balikbayang Mahal: Passages from Exile (2008). Aside from pointing out that Igloria consciously used poetic devices to highlight issues on history, culture and gender in her poems, this study also reveals that Igloria employed contextual interventions as reflected in the chapters of this study. All in all, this study attests that Iglorias poems about things Philippine and the Filipino people are important milestones in scholarship and criticism of the Philippines - as a nation and as a people not because they provide something new, but because they provide a good occasion for a retrospective assessment of the Filipino nation and its enduring literary, cultural, and political identity in relation with and sometimes in opposition to its Spanish, American and Japanese colonizers.
format text
author Salcedo, Francis Xavier R.
author_facet Salcedo, Francis Xavier R.
author_sort Salcedo, Francis Xavier R.
title Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
title_short Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
title_full Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
title_fullStr Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
title_full_unstemmed Fragments towards a poetic cartography of Philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of Luisa Igloria
title_sort fragments towards a poetic cartography of philippine history and herstory in the selected poems of luisa igloria
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2017
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/497
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