Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal

The matter of geography does not seem to register in the predominant readings of the works of the nineteenth-century Filipino writer Jose Rizal, most of which privilege a framework built around nationalism. In this article, I consider how the forest as a narrative space and conceptual trope—or “for...

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Main Author: Diaz, Glenn L
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2023
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/203
https://doi.org/10.20495/seas.12.2_213
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.english-faculty-pubs-12032024-03-18T08:40:16Z Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal Diaz, Glenn L The matter of geography does not seem to register in the predominant readings of the works of the nineteenth-century Filipino writer Jose Rizal, most of which privilege a framework built around nationalism. In this article, I consider how the forest as a narrative space and conceptual trope—or “forest thought”—can mediate the way in which history is imagined in Rizal’s novels, Noli me tangere (Touch me not) (1887) and El filibusterismo (The subversion) (1891), mostly by disclosing, unsettling, and ultimately resisting the legibility that state-making and narrative require and engender. In looking at “forest thought” in the novels and the conceptions of history that it reveals, I seek to bring to the surface a disrupting potential in the works: the forest as “excess” of and radical threat from the center, as incubator of an inchoate utopia, and as a site of generative illegibility, which also locates the trauma of colonial conquest in Rizal as a figure of European enlightenment, offering hopefully new ways of thinking about the constellation of space, narrative, state-making, and empire. 2023-08-24T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/203 https://doi.org/10.20495/seas.12.2_213 English Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Jose Rizal spatio-poetics forest Philippine literature empire Arts and Humanities 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 Jose Rizal
spatio-poetics
forest
Philippine literature
empire
Arts and Humanities
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
spellingShingle Jose Rizal
spatio-poetics
forest
Philippine literature
empire
Arts and Humanities
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Diaz, Glenn L
Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
description The matter of geography does not seem to register in the predominant readings of the works of the nineteenth-century Filipino writer Jose Rizal, most of which privilege a framework built around nationalism. In this article, I consider how the forest as a narrative space and conceptual trope—or “forest thought”—can mediate the way in which history is imagined in Rizal’s novels, Noli me tangere (Touch me not) (1887) and El filibusterismo (The subversion) (1891), mostly by disclosing, unsettling, and ultimately resisting the legibility that state-making and narrative require and engender. In looking at “forest thought” in the novels and the conceptions of history that it reveals, I seek to bring to the surface a disrupting potential in the works: the forest as “excess” of and radical threat from the center, as incubator of an inchoate utopia, and as a site of generative illegibility, which also locates the trauma of colonial conquest in Rizal as a figure of European enlightenment, offering hopefully new ways of thinking about the constellation of space, narrative, state-making, and empire.
format text
author Diaz, Glenn L
author_facet Diaz, Glenn L
author_sort Diaz, Glenn L
title Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
title_short Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
title_full Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
title_fullStr Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
title_full_unstemmed Disrupting the Realist Nation: The Forest as Radical Illegibility in the Novels of Jose Rizal
title_sort disrupting the realist nation: the forest as radical illegibility in the novels of jose rizal
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2023
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/203
https://doi.org/10.20495/seas.12.2_213
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