Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.

In this synthetic introductory essay, I consider the places of E. San Juan, Jr. as gleaned from the contributions to this special section: from San Juan’s childhood in Manila and early education at the University of the Philippines at a time when veterans of the 1898 Revolution were still alive and...

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Main Author: Veric, Charlie Samuya
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2016
Subjects:
Jr.
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/159
https://ajol.ateneo.edu/kk/articles/77/822
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.english-faculty-pubs-11702022-04-25T10:01:33Z Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr. Veric, Charlie Samuya In this synthetic introductory essay, I consider the places of E. San Juan, Jr. as gleaned from the contributions to this special section: from San Juan’s childhood in Manila and early education at the University of the Philippines at a time when veterans of the 1898 Revolution were still alive and peasant-based insurgency was on the rise; to his implicit contribution to the study of popular culture in the Philippines in the context of the emergence of nationalist struggle in the 1960s; to his turning point as a materialist literary critic who wrote the study on Bulosan which coincided with his own decision to stay in the United States; to his participation in anti-Marcos organizing as an exile devoted to the radical future of his homeland; to his maturation as a theorist of race and racism in American institutions of higher education; to his contributions to the development of Filipino Critical Theory and environmental activism; to his systematic critique of Western capitalist modernity as a major scholar from the Third World; and finally, to his attempt to vernacularize international solidarity. I argue that San Juan’s body of work constitutes a decolonizing archive that records the unfulfilled projects of liberation struggles from the last century. I also suggest that such an archive is noteworthy because it reveals the direction of Third World revolutionary critique from decolonization to the crisis of globalization today. 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/159 https://ajol.ateneo.edu/kk/articles/77/822 English Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Decolonization E. San Juan Jr. globalization revolution Third World English Language and Literature South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Decolonization
E. San Juan
Jr.
globalization
revolution
Third World
English Language and Literature
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
spellingShingle Decolonization
E. San Juan
Jr.
globalization
revolution
Third World
English Language and Literature
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Veric, Charlie Samuya
Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
description In this synthetic introductory essay, I consider the places of E. San Juan, Jr. as gleaned from the contributions to this special section: from San Juan’s childhood in Manila and early education at the University of the Philippines at a time when veterans of the 1898 Revolution were still alive and peasant-based insurgency was on the rise; to his implicit contribution to the study of popular culture in the Philippines in the context of the emergence of nationalist struggle in the 1960s; to his turning point as a materialist literary critic who wrote the study on Bulosan which coincided with his own decision to stay in the United States; to his participation in anti-Marcos organizing as an exile devoted to the radical future of his homeland; to his maturation as a theorist of race and racism in American institutions of higher education; to his contributions to the development of Filipino Critical Theory and environmental activism; to his systematic critique of Western capitalist modernity as a major scholar from the Third World; and finally, to his attempt to vernacularize international solidarity. I argue that San Juan’s body of work constitutes a decolonizing archive that records the unfulfilled projects of liberation struggles from the last century. I also suggest that such an archive is noteworthy because it reveals the direction of Third World revolutionary critique from decolonization to the crisis of globalization today.
format text
author Veric, Charlie Samuya
author_facet Veric, Charlie Samuya
author_sort Veric, Charlie Samuya
title Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
title_short Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
title_full Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
title_fullStr Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
title_full_unstemmed Prologue: Pasts and Futures of E. San Juan, Jr.
title_sort prologue: pasts and futures of e. san juan, jr.
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2016
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/159
https://ajol.ateneo.edu/kk/articles/77/822
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