A history of the Philippines / Samuel K. Tan.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Manila :;Quezon City : Manila Studies Association ;;Philippine National Historical Society, 2012Description: viii, 131 p. : maps 23 cmSubject(s): LOC classification:
  • DS 668  .T153 2012
Summary: A History of the Philippines, herein offered by Dr. Samuel K. Tan, former Chairman and Professor in the Department of History of the University of the Philippines and presently Chairman and Executive Director of the National Historical Institute, Offers a conceptual framework of what he calls "the story of man in the Philippines" in the context of "the specific ecological system" and "distinctive historical experience" that have shaped his "particular character and identity." Dr. Tan provided in this slim volume a picture of Philippine culture which, he wrote, "ought to be understood from the totality of the ethno-linguistic varieties which constitute the fabric of Filipino society." Hence he divided Filipino cultural communities into three main groups - the Mocos, Indios, the infieles - colonial categories, but nevertheless reflective of what evolved in the Philippines as a result of the historical processes that have transpired in the island world of the Filipinos. - Bernardita Reyes Churchill -
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Filipiniana Filipiniana Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center Filipiniana DS 668 .T153 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3AEA2012001699

A History of the Philippines, herein offered by Dr. Samuel K. Tan, former Chairman and Professor in the Department of History of the University of the Philippines and presently Chairman and Executive Director of the National Historical Institute, Offers a conceptual framework of what he calls "the story of man in the Philippines" in the context of "the specific ecological system" and "distinctive historical experience" that have shaped his "particular character and identity." Dr. Tan provided in this slim volume a picture of Philippine culture which, he wrote, "ought to be understood from the totality of the ethno-linguistic varieties which constitute the fabric of Filipino society." Hence he divided Filipino cultural communities into three main groups - the Mocos, Indios, the infieles - colonial categories, but nevertheless reflective of what evolved in the Philippines as a result of the historical processes that have transpired in the island world of the Filipinos. - Bernardita Reyes Churchill -

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