Apocalypse

Alvin Yapan’s “Apocalypse” (Filipino: “Apokalipsis”) renders the end of the world as the simultaneous transgression of presupposed boundaries between the individual and collective, the human and non-human, and the rational and irrational. By locating the narrative in an unnamed corner of the Philipp...

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Main Author: Benitez, Christian Jil R
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2019
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/18
https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3704
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
id ph-ateneo-arc.filipino-faculty-pubs-1017
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.filipino-faculty-pubs-10172020-05-19T08:10:01Z Apocalypse Benitez, Christian Jil R Alvin Yapan’s “Apocalypse” (Filipino: “Apokalipsis”) renders the end of the world as the simultaneous transgression of presupposed boundaries between the individual and collective, the human and non-human, and the rational and irrational. By locating the narrative in an unnamed corner of the Philippine metropolis that is altogether too familiar in the present, and through interweaving the folkloric and popular, the text proposes a timely urban legend that articulates anxieties of a particular tropical consciousness grappling with modernism. The tale is a counternarrative that acknowledges contemporary overlaps – in the same vein as articulated by Senf (2014, p.31) who values the Gothic as “a counterbalance produced by writers and thinkers who felt limited by such a confident worldview and recognized that the power of the past, the irrational, and the violent continue to hold sway in the world.” The present text becomes a rehearsal of the story’s proposed apocalypse through the transgression offered by the act of translation which opens this particular tropical articulation to a wider field of discourse on the modern. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/18 https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3704 Filipino Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Tropical Gothic Apocalypse Philippines literature translation Modern Literature
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 Tropical
Gothic
Apocalypse
Philippines
literature
translation
Modern Literature
spellingShingle Tropical
Gothic
Apocalypse
Philippines
literature
translation
Modern Literature
Benitez, Christian Jil R
Apocalypse
description Alvin Yapan’s “Apocalypse” (Filipino: “Apokalipsis”) renders the end of the world as the simultaneous transgression of presupposed boundaries between the individual and collective, the human and non-human, and the rational and irrational. By locating the narrative in an unnamed corner of the Philippine metropolis that is altogether too familiar in the present, and through interweaving the folkloric and popular, the text proposes a timely urban legend that articulates anxieties of a particular tropical consciousness grappling with modernism. The tale is a counternarrative that acknowledges contemporary overlaps – in the same vein as articulated by Senf (2014, p.31) who values the Gothic as “a counterbalance produced by writers and thinkers who felt limited by such a confident worldview and recognized that the power of the past, the irrational, and the violent continue to hold sway in the world.” The present text becomes a rehearsal of the story’s proposed apocalypse through the transgression offered by the act of translation which opens this particular tropical articulation to a wider field of discourse on the modern.
format text
author Benitez, Christian Jil R
author_facet Benitez, Christian Jil R
author_sort Benitez, Christian Jil R
title Apocalypse
title_short Apocalypse
title_full Apocalypse
title_fullStr Apocalypse
title_full_unstemmed Apocalypse
title_sort apocalypse
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2019
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/18
https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3704
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