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Himlayan, pantiyon, kampo santo, sementeryo : exploring Philippine cemeteries / edited by Grace Barretto-Tesoro.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextDiliman, Quezon City : University of the Philippines Press, [2016]Description: xxxi, 242 pages 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9789715427883
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • GT 3281.A2 .H574 2016
Contents:
Angels on earth, investigating infant and children burials in Manila cemeteries / Grace Barretto-Tesoro -- Angels and dragons in the Manila Chinese cemetery / Donna Mae N. Arriola and Eleanor Marie S. Lim -- Ang mamatay ng dahil sa iyo, patriots' graves at Manila cemeteries and neighboring provinces / Andrea Malaya M. Ragragio -- Death, grief, and memorial, a review of the Boy Scouts tragedy of 1963 / Kathleen D.C. Tantuico and Omar K. Choa -- Colonial period cemeteries as Filipino heritage / Michelle S. Eusebio.
Summary: Himalayan, Pantiyon, Kampo Santo, Sementeryo: Exploring Philippine Cemeteries contains five articles that look into how different individuals are treated at death. The authors explore representations of non-adults, ethnicity, patriots, and boy scouts in various cemeteries in Manila and neighboring provinces during the different colonial periods in Philippine history. The book features infant and child burials in Manila North Cementery and La Loma Catholic Cemetery; Chinese-Filipinos in the Manila Chinese Cemetery; the memorials and shrines built for Philippine Revolutionaries who fought against Spain and the United States; the Boy Scouts who died en route to the 11th World Scout Jamboree in Greece in 1963, and the military officers and soldiers, and national artists and scientists at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. The book advocates that we should take a second look at cemeteries not just as places for the dead but as active heritage sites where the living immortalize the dead through burial adornments. Mausoleums and gravestones also expose individual and collective histories of the decreased the politics of where and how to bury the dead is struggle. It is an internal emotional struggle of a mother who lost a child. It is a war of ideologies on defining who and what is a patriot. It is a clash between families and the government on owning the dead. And it is a conflict between a ruling class and the inferior merchant class divided by ethnicity and religion. The viability of cemeteries as heritage spaces is also examined in this book. Mausoleums exhibit architectural styles that rival other forms of built heritage. Burial structures are symbolic markers of the history of a people in a specific time and space. As such, Philippine cemeteries are reflections of our past. --Back cover of the book.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Filipiniana Filipiniana Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center Filipiniana GT 3281.A2 .H574 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3FIL2017015748

Includes bibliographical references (pages 203-229) and index.

Angels on earth, investigating infant and children burials in Manila cemeteries / Grace Barretto-Tesoro -- Angels and dragons in the Manila Chinese cemetery / Donna Mae N. Arriola and Eleanor Marie S. Lim -- Ang mamatay ng dahil sa iyo, patriots' graves at Manila cemeteries and neighboring provinces / Andrea Malaya M. Ragragio -- Death, grief, and memorial, a review of the Boy Scouts tragedy of 1963 / Kathleen D.C. Tantuico and Omar K. Choa -- Colonial period cemeteries as Filipino heritage / Michelle S. Eusebio.

Himalayan, Pantiyon, Kampo Santo, Sementeryo: Exploring Philippine Cemeteries contains five articles that look into how different individuals are treated at death. The authors explore representations of non-adults, ethnicity, patriots, and boy scouts in various cemeteries in Manila and neighboring provinces during the different colonial periods in Philippine history. The book features infant and child burials in Manila North Cementery and La Loma Catholic Cemetery; Chinese-Filipinos in the Manila Chinese Cemetery; the memorials and shrines built for Philippine Revolutionaries who fought against Spain and the United States; the Boy Scouts who died en route to the 11th World Scout Jamboree in Greece in 1963, and the military officers and soldiers, and national artists and scientists at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. The book advocates that we should take a second look at cemeteries not just as places for the dead but as active heritage sites where the living immortalize the dead through burial adornments. Mausoleums and gravestones also expose individual and collective histories of the decreased the politics of where and how to bury the dead is struggle. It is an internal emotional struggle of a mother who lost a child. It is a war of ideologies on defining who and what is a patriot. It is a clash between families and the government on owning the dead. And it is a conflict between a ruling class and the inferior merchant class divided by ethnicity and religion. The viability of cemeteries as heritage spaces is also examined in this book. Mausoleums exhibit architectural styles that rival other forms of built heritage. Burial structures are symbolic markers of the history of a people in a specific time and space. As such, Philippine cemeteries are reflections of our past. --Back cover of the book.

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