What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"

Since their first publication in magazines like Philippines Graphic and the Philippine Free Press, and their subsequent re-publication under the collection title Tropical Gothic, Nick Joaquin’s classic short stories from the 1940s have been mainly appraised within a gothic framework. While critics h...

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Main Author: Ang, Ann
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2024
Subjects:
Sun
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss41/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2045/viewcontent/KK_2041_2C_202023_203_20Regular_20section_20__20Ang.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.kk-20452024-12-19T05:42:02Z What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton" Ang, Ann Since their first publication in magazines like Philippines Graphic and the Philippine Free Press, and their subsequent re-publication under the collection title Tropical Gothic, Nick Joaquin’s classic short stories from the 1940s have been mainly appraised within a gothic framework. While critics have read the doublings and monstrous excesses of these stories as expressing a postcolonial resistance to colonial modernity, or a desirous anxiety for a pre-colonial Philippines, this paper discusses tropicality as a further localization of such gothic elements. By adopting a new materialist approach to ecological imaginaries, this article argues that the discourse of the tropical in Joaquin’s aesthetics exercises an agentic role in re-locating temperate climactic markers within the Philippines. After briefly tracing the broader intellectual history of the tropical and the gothic, the discussion turns to the tropical gothic as a distinct category for the refiguration of gothic tropes within a material and tropical aesthetics. By drawing on feminist materialisms, this article makes a case for understanding tropical heat in “The Summer Solstice” and “The Dying Wanton,” as a source of animation and motility. Further attention to transcorporeality in these stories reveals the transformative power of the tropical on human bodies in their more-than-human aspects. By departing from sociohistorical frameworks, this paper invites further consideration of Joaquin’s contributions to a Philippine materialist and environmental poetics. 2024-12-19T06:09:03Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss41/3 info:doi/10.13185/1656-152x.2045 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2045/viewcontent/KK_2041_2C_202023_203_20Regular_20section_20__20Ang.pdf Kritika Kultura Archīum Ateneo Climate Corporeality Equatorial Hispanic Sun
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 Climate
Corporeality
Equatorial
Hispanic
Sun
spellingShingle Climate
Corporeality
Equatorial
Hispanic
Sun
Ang, Ann
What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
description Since their first publication in magazines like Philippines Graphic and the Philippine Free Press, and their subsequent re-publication under the collection title Tropical Gothic, Nick Joaquin’s classic short stories from the 1940s have been mainly appraised within a gothic framework. While critics have read the doublings and monstrous excesses of these stories as expressing a postcolonial resistance to colonial modernity, or a desirous anxiety for a pre-colonial Philippines, this paper discusses tropicality as a further localization of such gothic elements. By adopting a new materialist approach to ecological imaginaries, this article argues that the discourse of the tropical in Joaquin’s aesthetics exercises an agentic role in re-locating temperate climactic markers within the Philippines. After briefly tracing the broader intellectual history of the tropical and the gothic, the discussion turns to the tropical gothic as a distinct category for the refiguration of gothic tropes within a material and tropical aesthetics. By drawing on feminist materialisms, this article makes a case for understanding tropical heat in “The Summer Solstice” and “The Dying Wanton,” as a source of animation and motility. Further attention to transcorporeality in these stories reveals the transformative power of the tropical on human bodies in their more-than-human aspects. By departing from sociohistorical frameworks, this paper invites further consideration of Joaquin’s contributions to a Philippine materialist and environmental poetics.
format text
author Ang, Ann
author_facet Ang, Ann
author_sort Ang, Ann
title What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
title_short What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
title_full What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
title_fullStr What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
title_full_unstemmed What's Tropical About Nick Joaquin's Tropical Gothic?: Heat and Corporeality in "The Summer Solstice" and "The Dying Wanton"
title_sort what's tropical about nick joaquin's tropical gothic?: heat and corporeality in "the summer solstice" and "the dying wanton"
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2024
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss41/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2045/viewcontent/KK_2041_2C_202023_203_20Regular_20section_20__20Ang.pdf
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