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Two women as specters of history : Lakambini and Indigo child / by Rody Vera edited with production notes & interview by Ellen Ongkeko-Marfil

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextQuezon City : Bughaw, C2019Description: xxii, 179 pages 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9789715508971
Subject(s): Summary: [Rody] Vera cultivated the serendipitous vision of regarding Gregoria de Jesus, widow of the first would-have-been President Andres Bonifacio, as the body on whom the betrayals and shortcomings of the foreign invader, local elite, and well-intentioned revolutionary would be inscribed. With the return to popularity of the surviving members of Marcos's family, premised on the wager that the present generation would be ignorant or dismissive of the strongman's monstrosities, Vera responded to an invitation to provide a play that turned on the traumatic experience of a left-revolutionary activist, the late-twentieth-century counterpart of de Jesus. . . . With the present volume, the earnest student of communication should be sufficiently motivated to read through the material as written (and answered, in the interview) by Vera and arranged by the publisher. Also indispensable would be a viewing of Indigo Child, the soon-to-be-completed documentary on Lakambini, and (if our luck holds out) the feature-film version of Lakambini itself. A more casual reader could opt to zero in on Indigo Child first, especially if she would have seen the play and/or [Ellen] Ongkeko-Marfil's filmization. Since none of the entries in this volume . . . is a closed text, such a casual reader would be left with a clutch of unanswered questions. I would imagine that that would motivate [the reader] to proceed to the interview with Vera; but inasmuch as the said interview only provides tantalizing references to the Lakambini script, then our casual reader would wind up reading everything as well, even in an alternate order.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Filipiniana Filipiniana Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center Filipiniana PN 1997.3 .V58 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3FIL2019016501
Filipiniana Filipiniana DLSU-D HS Learning Resource Center Filipiniana Filipiniana PN 1997.3 .V58 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3SHS2019000498
Browsing DLSU-D HS Learning Resource Center shelves, Shelving location: Filipiniana, Collection: Filipiniana Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
PN 1701 .C263 2011 Klasrum drama : mga anyo ng dulaan para sa paaralan PN 1993.42.P6 .H386 2015 Heneral Luna : the history behind the movie. PN 1993.5.P6 .M289 2014 Making waves : PN 1997.3 .V58 2019 Two women as specters of history : Lakambini and Indigo child / PN 3355 .D159 2006 The knowing is in the writing : PN 4305.M6 .G346 2017 Ampalaya monologues : PN 4305.M6 .N659 2016 No filter :

[Rody] Vera cultivated the serendipitous vision of regarding Gregoria de Jesus, widow of the first would-have-been President Andres Bonifacio, as the body on whom the betrayals and shortcomings of the foreign invader, local elite, and well-intentioned revolutionary would be inscribed. With the return to popularity of the surviving members of Marcos's family, premised on the wager that the present generation would be ignorant or dismissive of the strongman's monstrosities, Vera responded to an invitation to provide a play that turned on the traumatic experience of a left-revolutionary activist, the late-twentieth-century counterpart of de Jesus. . . . With the present volume, the earnest student of communication should be sufficiently motivated to read through the material as written (and answered, in the interview) by Vera and arranged by the publisher. Also indispensable would be a viewing of Indigo Child, the soon-to-be-completed documentary on Lakambini, and (if our luck holds out) the feature-film version of Lakambini itself. A more casual reader could opt to zero in on Indigo Child first, especially if she would have seen the play and/or [Ellen] Ongkeko-Marfil's filmization. Since none of the entries in this volume . . . is a closed text, such a casual reader would be left with a clutch of unanswered questions. I would imagine that that would motivate [the reader] to proceed to the interview with Vera; but inasmuch as the said interview only provides tantalizing references to the Lakambini script, then our casual reader would wind up reading everything as well, even in an alternate order.

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