UP Press catalog 2014 updated

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UP PRESS CA ALOG THE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES PRESS E. de los Santos St., UP Campus, Diliman, Quezon City 1101 925-3243, 926-6642 / Telefax No.: 928-2558 press@up.edu.ph uppress.com.ph



CONTENTS 2014 Titles and Reprints................................................................5 2013 Titles and Reprints...............................................................13 2012 Titles and Reprints..............................................................23 2011 Titles and Reprints................................................................31 2010 Titles and Reprints............................................................. 41 2009 Titles and Reprints........................................................... 56 Forthcoming Titles....................................................................... 66 E-books............................................................................................. 68 Centennial Titles............................................................................72

ABOUT THE UP PRESS The University of the Philippines Press, founded in 1965, is the premiere academic publishing house in the country. It has published around 900 books, hewing only to the strictest editorial standards in its selection of titles—literary and creative works, anthologies and studies in Philippine studies, and research in the various academic disciplines. UP Press implements the highest academic standards in its selection of new titles. Other than this task, the Press endeavors to reprint “classics” that remain relevant or of interest to today’s readers. Since the middle of 2011, the Press has also started publishing electronic books, in partnership with Flipside Digital Content. UP Press is also actively seeking partnerships with foreign academic presses in the reprinting of excellent books on Philippine studies.

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2014 ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Masculinity, Media, and Their Publics in the Philippines undertakes critical investigations into the forms by which masculinity is imagined, intuited, and instrumentalized in the contemporary postcolonial space of the Philippines. These investigations are primarily foregrounded upon the analysis and reflection of the political economy in Philippine visual culture through which these forms of masculinity are manifested, particularly through mass media practice. Subjects of Dr. Reuben Ramas Cañete’s essays in the book include Post-EDSA homoerotic cinema, outright pornography, Bench billboard ads, Manny Pacquiao, and the UP Oblation. The author teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Rina Angela Corpus has compiled essays written from back when she was a graduate student in the 1990s which deal with questions in reading dance, art, and gender. The collection covers some of the most significant Philippine women choreographers. The essays explore and investigate the entanglements of aesthetics, sexual politics, and other realities that impact the field. Quoting Dr. Ann Dilis of the University of North Carolina: “(Corpus’s) subjects are made vivid through evocative description and attention to individual perspective. Her intersectional analyses explore questions of representation and agency in ways specific to the communities and artists she studies.” The author teaches Art Studies at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Ang matingkad na katangian ng araling pelikula ay ang pag-uugat nito sa problematiko ng bansa at identidad, na hindi hiwalay ang pelikula, kundi integral sa formasyon ng mga identidad at ng kabuuang bansa, kundi man ng imahinaryo ng posibilidad at limitasyon ng isang kontraryong bansa at identidad. Ito ang lokus ng enerhiya ng araling pelikula at mahalaga ang kontribusyon ni Nicanor Tiongson kung bakit dito umiinog—sa kasaysayan at pagsasabansa—ang araling pelikula.—Mula sa Introduksyon

Ang mga publikasyon at panunungkulan ni Nicanor G. Tiongson bilang pangkulturang administrador ay may landas na nabuksan tungo sa pananaw na makalipunan at maka-Pilipino. —Bienvenido Lumbera, National Artist for Literature and UP Professor Emeritus, University of the Philippines As cultural historian, theater artist, educator, and cultural leader, Nicanor G. Tiongson has been an inspiration for colleagues and a younger generation of scholars and cultural workers, as the present volume of diverse and excellent essays shows. In his capacious love for Philippine culture, and his passion to see it truly transformative in the life of the nation, Nic is an exemplary intellectual. —Resil B. Mojares, Professor Emeritus, University of San Carlos Using the body of works of Filipino filmmaker Lino Brocka, the book examines the relations between cinema, cultural politics, and transnationalism in the Philippines. It analyzes issues of national and Third World cinemas, as problematized in Philippine cinema. Using the tropes of the city, family, body, and sexuality, the book explores the junctures in which the nation is contested. The focus of the study is on Marcos’s nation building, and how his efforts to modernize the nation continue to reverberate in subsequent national administrations. The author is Dean of the UP College of Mass Communication.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Maria L.M. Fres-Felix, author of Boy in the Platinum Palace and Other Stories, is described by National Artist F. Sionil Jose as one of the few writers today who “knows how to write a story.” He goes on to describe her as a consummate craftsman, possessing both style and originality. Jose praises her “skillful use of choice verbs rather than adverbs and adjectives,” as well as her ability to incorporate tiny details which “contribute to the plausibility of the story.” This collection of short stories, the author’s second with UP Press, covers a range of settings, from domiciles, to corporate offices, to caregiving institutions. It does not limit itself to the present period but makes a foray into the country’s colonial past. The author is an award-winning fictionist and a former banker. Rhetorical questions implode throughout Luis H. Francia’s Tattered Boat … Given his global concerns and universal queries, the sea-tossing is still the inquisition of a planet fraught with false gods. Answers lead to a revelation of neither-ness—as celestial mortal. And it spurs on the wanderer through islands rife with idiot loves and slaughtered angels … Occasionally the poet as seer conjures the ordinary: a hand, a foot, a tree, a kiss, an encounter with a dentist. ’Tis all fair game for the troubadour who also surveys the ghosts of the younger self, survives after calibrating the very air, and reaches shore after shore.—Krip Yuson, Poet, Palanca Hall of Fame

Poisonostalgia is a case against complacency. Here is a collection that manifests these times’ needed dexterity in both lyric and narrative poetry. It pokes fun where it must, pulls multicolored rabbits from a sequined hat. Here the poet tackles myriad concerns of modern urban living, in both sparse and complex diction, in experimentations with form. From ruminations on ruin and passing to declarations of distrust and disgust with the fake and the artificial, Gulle’s new book of poems is unabashed and undaunted. “Quietly as quite: / if no wing / nor word / arrives” the poet writes, because not all nostalgia is an avenue for catharsis. And often the best recourse is not to stare, but to speak.—Joel M. Toledo, Poet, Palanca awardee The author is an award-winning poet and essayist.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

The Postcolonial Perverse is a two-volume collection of fifteen different critiques of varying “aspects” of contemporary Philippine culture. The work’s “eclectic” topics range from the independent cinema movement to the mystifications of nationalist poetics, from sacrilegious “avant-garde” art to the deconstruction of an inaugural text in the Philippine anglophone tradition, and from reflections on the contact zone between science and art to the impertinent question of our foremost national hero’s quizzical gender and sexual identity. The title’s two concepts—“postcolonial” and “perverse”—are almost symmetrically split across these two books, urging the reader to more sharply intuit and “experience” the project’s central theme: the postcolonial hybridity or cultural mixedness that characterizes Philippine life is the same thing as the perverse inability of its agents to stay committed to principled and categorical thought. Poet and literary critic J. Neil Garcia teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

Digital Cinema in the Philippines, 1999–2009 traces the technological shift in Philippine cinema, from celluloid to digital, by narrating the history of digital cinema in the country from 1999 to mid-2009. It investigates how digital films in the Philippines are produced, distributed, and exhibited, as well as tentatively examines Philippine digital cinema’s aesthetic tendencies that emerged from the shift from celluloid to digital filmmaking. The book also explores the notions of independence in relation to Philippine digital cinema and the Philippine film industry. Eloisa May P. Hernandez teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

This first collection of ten poems by Ned Parfan, six of which are lyric sequences, offers the ear and eye voices of splintered selves breaking out of dark passages of childhood trauma, and images broken off from the core of chaos-as-point of origin. The poems’ aperture into human asylums of pain is constantly widened by personae intent on conversing with each other and with others, propelled by the desire to rebel against or to surrender to the untouchable darkness at the edge of mortal vision. The poetic imagination of Parfan hurtles through time and space, the way it moves through stations of the LRT when the flood of typhoon Ondoy wrought near-apocalyptic visions of water as the end of life as we once knew it.— Marjorie Evasco, Poet, Palanca awardee

E. San Juan Jr., a writer and a literary critic, uses his poetry to reflect his advocacy in the struggle for supremacy between global capitalism and national proletarianism. Ang wika ay isang matinding larangan ng pakikibaka ng mga uri, lakas, at iba’t ibang sektor ng lipunan sa bawat yugto ng kasaysayan. Sa balangkas at prosesong umuugit sa mga salita nakaugat ang paraan ng interpelasyon ng mambabasa/nakikinig upang maging sabjek na sumusunod sa naghaharing orden, o tumututol at lumalaban. … [Anumang] paksa o tema, estilo o estruktura, talinghaga o sagisag, ay maaaring gamitin upang makisangkot at lumahok sa pagpapasiya kung sino … ang magtatagumpay sa wakas.

Newly retired UP Visayas Professor Victor N. Sugbo’s Taburos Han Dagat pays tribute to his hometown, Tacloban—the city of his fondest affections, and now most lyrical grief, in the wake of typhoon Yolanda’s horrific onslaught. These poems were written by the author while he was living in temporary (and paradoxical) exile in various places in the arid Near East—an ironic experience of cross-cultural dialogue that the book captures in its parallel-text presentation of translations from the original Waray to English, which the poet himself so expertly performed. Delicate and elemental, the poems in either language are spindrift moments of brief but intense illumination, shimmering on the mind’s placid surface before vanishing, softly, into its meditative depths.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

With the clinical eye of an academic, former UP College of Mass Communication Dean Luis Teodoro marshals data and historical contexts to pin down the powerholders, sparing no one—much unlike other “pundits” who dribble words for their patrons’ pleasure. Teodoro spares no institution that lumbers like a dinosaur: landlords who perpetuate dynasties and form private armies; archbishops who sermonize about critical collaboration and power-sharing; the Supreme Court which lets slip, with indecent glory, its partisan patronage.

Edited by a team of mass communication experts, Media at Lipunan and Communication and Media Theories respond to the basic and urgent need for compendiums of scholarly ruminations on Philippine mass media culture—its texts, contexts, forms, and publics. This is the very first time that books of this sort have been assembled—comprised entirely of critical and theoretical essays on communication, mass media, and cultural studies, written exclusively by Filipinos— and the University of the Philippines Press is entirely enthused and honored to bring this project to full fruition. These are excellent reference books that document, organize, and make accessible to the public essential readings in mass media studies.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Transfiksyon is a collection of new fictional journeys intransit, unique Filipino experiences of crossing borders, challenging memory, subverting ideology, and moving the self. Tayo’y mga manlalakbay sa kani-kaniyang panahon. Narito ang mga kuwentong itinala gamit ang malikhaing isipan at lumikha ng mga bakas na hindi na mabubura. Lunan ng Transfiksyon ang iba’t ibang anyo ng pakikipagsapalaran sa malalawak at makikitid na espasyo, sa kawalan, sa panaginip, sa nakaraan, at hinaharap. Sina Rolando Tolentino at Rommel Rodriguez ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman.

MANAGEMENT AND ECONOMICS

UP Professor Emeritus Gerardo Sicat’s biography of former Prime Minister Cesar Virata is a work of scholarship and meticulous research as well as a compellingly written piece of creative nonfiction. The subject’s life unfolds within the matrix of his nation’s economic history—as an educator in the national university, as a technocrat and prime minister during the Marcos years, and thereafter as a private citizen, a banker, and a respected senior statesman. Prime Minister Virata’s life serves as a unique prism through which to see and appreciate the complexity of Philippine economic history. As told from the necessarily subjective perspective of a fellow economist and participant-observer, this book provides a much-needed space within which one may reflect on the interesting convergences between the Philippines’ economic and political histories.

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

The book, Changing Philippine Climate: Impacts on Agriculture and Natural Resources, presents the state of the knowledge on the effects of man-made global warming on the Philippines, focusing in particular on the weather, topographical, and aquatic systems, including their uniquely threatened biodiversities. Authored by eminent Filipino scientists, this book includes mitigation and adaptation strategies, as well as risk management recommendations, directed mostly at local and national structures of governance. The work, however, never loses sight of the overall global environmental picture, and thus invites the critical-minded reader to appreciate the complexity of the geopolitical situation within which any future solutions to this ecological emergency must be framed.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

Serialized in various newspapers of the day, Historia de Ilocos was finally published in two volumes in 1890. The first volume covers Ilocos’s prehistory while the second volume deals with Ilocos history from the sixteenth century onwards. Historia de Ilocos was awarded a gold medal at the Manila and Madrid Expositions. Isabelo de los Reyes wrote from his knowledge and experiences as an Ilocano to further knowledge about Philippine culture. He wanted Filipinos to know their cultural heritage, and to be proud of it. Translated into English by Maria Elinora Peralta Imson, this rich heritage may now be accessed by today’s generation of Filipinos.

2014 REPRINTS

2014 Reprints

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2014 REPRINTS

2013 ARTS AND HUMANITIES

All Our Nameable Days: Poems Revisited is a selection from the poet’s works through eight published collections since Fugitive Emphasis (1973) to Care of Light (2010), except Poems and Parables (his first selection, reprinted in 2002) and In Ordinary Time (2004). It consists of fiftyfour poems; an Introduction which clarifies his project of poetic “re-visioning”; relevant Notes on a number of the poems there; and at the end, an essay on his own poetics, “Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads,” a potential resource in creative writing courses. Gémino Abad is an award-winning poet and Professor Emeritus at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Perhaps the first of its kind released in the Philippines, Horror: Filipino Fiction for Young Adults was conceived solely with the Filipino young adult reader in mind, with stories that explore the concerns and fears of today’s youth through the lens of horror written by new and experienced authors. Horror: Filipino Fiction for Young Adults is the first of a series of anthologies covering science fiction, fantasy, and other genres, presented by award-winning editors Dean Francis Alfar and Kenneth Yu.

The anthology The Farthest Shore: An Anthology of Fantasy Fiction from the Philippines is a homage to secondary world stories in the vein of J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, Frank Herbert’s Dune, and George R. R. Martin’s A Game of Thrones. Though the latter stories had fantastical settings only faintly similar to our reality and populated by monsters that had absolutely no relation to our creatures of the night, these books still developed a love in us for the fantastic and helped us appreciate the magic of our own stories. Here, you’ll encounter stories about a gigantic turtle-like beast traveling in space, a young woman’s cry for justice in an imagined world, and a witch-queen intent on escaping a deal with the devil. Welcome to the shores created by Filipino imagination. Welcome to The Farthest Shore. Between these covers are the best short stories of fantasy, horror, science fiction, and genres in-between, selected from the first five years of the Philippine Speculative Fiction annuals. Step through the portal and explore worlds old and new and experience the power of the literature of the imagination as crafted by Filipino authors. This collection was compiled and edited by award-winning fictionists Dean Francis Alfar and Nikki Alfar.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

According to Javier Sicilia, “in Philippines, Closer Texts, Tomás Calvillo has abandoned all the certainty that was characteristic of his previous poetic works, and having assumed the historical paradigm shift of the times, he allows a unique poetic resonance to be heard amidst all the disconcert, suffering, and emptiness. Calvillo’s work is an unreachable mystery that travels through our collective memory brilliantly deciphering humor and tenderness.” This current bilingual edition encompasses 55 of the 179 poems published in the original Spanish edition. It is also the first volume of work from the author to be presented in the Philippines. The author was born in Mexico and writes poetry, short stories, movie scripts, and experimental literary works. Travelbook: Poems is a journeying “into self as well as into the world” that follows “the sense of the curviform, or the yonic.” It takes the reader into the open-ended and recurrent experiences of beginnings, ends, and new beginnings in poems on growing up, leaving home, going against norms, identifying with the strange, and encountering mysteries, lovers, cities, selves, homes, death, and rebirth. Shane Carreon is an award-winning poet and teaches at the University of the Philippines, Cebu.

In Mark Anthony Cayanan’s new collection, Except You Enthrall Me, the speaker wants to “know enough to turn away before desire,” but as these gorgeous poems demonstrate time and again, ultimately this is an exercise in defeat. Here is a poet who slips effortlessly between the fantasy and the fact, the beloved and the shadow, a world in which, in the moment after love, one can “taste ashes in the air.” Visionary, lyrical, the heart left battered and shining, Except You Enthrall Me ravishes.—Quan Barry The author teaches at the Ateneo de Manila University.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

In this book’s affirmation of the power of poetic collaboration, we hear the poems in Tagalog and English carefully bring together, on the page and in the ear, different ways with language that give breath to what Kulas Talon’s itinerant urban troubadour observes in the boxwithin-the-box-within-the-possibly bigger-boxes where everybody seems to live. His poems punch holes into these boxes, exposing the oftentimes raw and rendered pointless, and the observing eye leaves the reader with the detritus of the scene for rumination of a deadening world. Let not the Shockbox revelations reiterate in our reading and re-readings the prophetic lament in the opening poem “Kahon”: Sinubukan niyang ipaliwanag ito sa ibang tao ngunit walang makinig.—Marjorie Evasco, Poet, Palanca awardee Demons of the New Year: An Anthology of Horror Fiction from the Philippines represents horror written by Filipino writers elaborating on the unique perspective of local horror. These are more than just rehashed tales from the provinces about Filipino mythological monsters like the aswang and the tikbalang. Nor are these your run-of-themill ghost stories told thrice over during sleepovers, with a flashlight shining in your face and your kumot pulled over your head. Within these pages, you will find tales of haunted houses, demon hunters, monster pop stars, and more. Welcome to the darkness that feeds on Filipino nightmares. But remember: don’t let them in.

The anthology Diaspora Ad Astra: An Anthology of Science Fiction from the Philippines represents science fiction made by Filipinos for Filipinos. This collection of stories looks at the future of Filipinos as we ask and wonder: will we be exporting human workers to Mars or will we be ruling a new Empire of Humanity? Or will we be running a guerrilla war against mad robots as the rest of homo sapiens flee into space in derelict battleships? Because of this, we’ve collected these Filipino stories that look into a multitude of possible futures. Moreover, with these stories, we offer you hope that there will be a future where Filipinos will still—whether we attain greatness or not—play a role on the stage of humanity.

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A postmodern novel by Ramon Guillermo, set in the nineteenth century during the time of Rizal and other heroes. Detalyadong inilarawan sa nobela ang paglalaro ng sungka, mula sa pinakapayak nitong anyo: “Magsisimula ang laro sa sabay na pagdakot ng dalawang manlalaro ng mga sigay sa alinmang maliit na bahay sa kanilang hanay at tig-iisang paghahasik ng mga sigay sa maliliit na bahay at sa kani-kanilang malaking bahay…. Hindi maglalagay ng sigay sa malaking bahay ng kalaban. Kapag naubos na ang kanyang hinahasik at walang laman ang nabagsakang bahay ng pinakahuli niyang sigay ay tapos na ang kanyang turno …” Detalyado ang masalimuot na paraan ng pagtatagumpay sa larong ito ngunit mahihinuhang may higit na malalim na ipinahihiwatig ang nobela. This collection of Gelacio Guillermo’s poetry reflects his commitment to proletarian literature, trying to capture and foreground the sentiments of the Philippine working class. Kahit ano’ng itawag sa sulating ito … si Gelacio ang pinakamahusay na nagsusulong niyon. [Ang] mga tula sa aklat na ito ay tungkol sa masa at sila ay sining. Nangungusap sa tinig ng mamamayan at sila’y panulaan, komited sa buhay at pagmamahal at sila’y panitikan. … Narito ang daigdig na hinimay hanggang sa pinakaubod. Narito ang buhay na nilubos at taimtim na pinagmunimunian. … Narito ang hikbi at awit mula sa kaibuturan ng isang tao na mangyaring hikbi’t awit din ng iba.—Conrad de Quiros, Columnist, Philippine Daily Inquirer Rafael Antonio C. San Diego’s first book of poems is truly remarkable. From poem to poem—or poem or prose, if you will—one is struck by their inimitable finesse. Here is an original, innovative, and sturdy voice in our own poetry’s heartland where the language forged from English is of our sweat and blood in our own scene and time.—Gémino H. Abad, Professor Emeritus, UP Diliman The author is a Palanca awardee and UP National Writers’ workshop fellow.

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Nicanor Tiongson teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. The articles in Science Philippines are a compilation of Star Science articles that have been arranged under broad classifications of the sciences. Who are our writers? Dedicated Filipino scientists and engineers here and abroad who wish to share their scientific work and philosophy with the Filipino public—to heighten the awareness of our government and media leaders, private industry, entrepreneurs, professionals, nonprofessionals, and most especially our youth, their parents and teachers, of the value of science to society. Editor Gisella Concepcion teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

This current volume … is a set of supplementary readings that form part of the multivolume Third World Perspectives on Politics Series. These readings, originally published in Kasarinlan: Philippine Journal of Third World Studies, adopt a developing country perspective, or more appropriately a Third World perspective, in comparison to most readings in Philippine politics. This volume provides a number of analytical tools and frameworks that can be used as theoretical and methodological handles in the study of Philippine politics.

MANAGEMENT AND ECONOMICS

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

ARTS AND HUMANITIES

The fourth in the series, the Urian Anthology 2000–2009 gathers articles, reviews, interviews, and other materials that focus on the most important cinematic phenomenon of the decade: the rise of the Philippine New Wave indie film. This book gives a comprehensive introduction to the Philippine New Wave by tracing its historical development, its modes of production, its aesthetics and styles, and its politics and impact on contemporary society. It also puts together reviews of selected films that represent the commercial genre movies that the film industry continued to produce during the decade: drama, bomba, comedy, romantic comedy, action film, and horror/fantasy.

Maria Ela Atienza teaches Political Science at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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MANAGEMENT AND ECONOMICS

Introduction to Statistics and Econometrics, second edition, is a book for beginning econometrics students. The major change in this edition is the addition of a chapter on logistic regression, a model of binary choice that is now commonly used in many disciplines including economics. Other changes include a section on instrumental variable estimation, end-of-chapter appendices on the use of Stata, in addition to EViews, to implement econometric techniques, and editorial revisions to improve exposition. Despite these changes, this edition retains the basic purpose and the basic format of the first edition, which won the 2004 National Academy of Science and Technology Outstanding Book Award. Rolando Danao is Professor Emeritus at the University of the Philippines, Dilman. This volume on comparative politics and government seeks to elaborate and supplement analytical tools and frameworks in which developing countries could be compared. Of major concern is to be able to use this in understanding what have been the problems in the process of development and democratization of developing regions. The articles also seek to provide a basis by which the reader could also critically examine the views presented by the different authors and note their relevance or irrelevance in comprehending similar situations as experiences in developing societies. The editors are faculty of the Department of Political Science in the UP, Diliman.

This book is a teaching material for an undergraduate course in agricultural policy. It contextualizes agricultural policy in terms of the interrelationships of the agricultural sector with the rest of the macro and global economies. The specific policies include land/agrarian reform, fertilizer and seed subsidies, and other concerns in the context of trade and industrial protection, irrigation, and mechanization. Policies related to credit in support of farming activities, as well as research and development to increase production possibilities for farmers, are also discussed. The book also introduces topics on food safety issues, environmental concerns, and quantitative analytical tools to encourage students to explore advanced aspects of agricultural policy. The author teaches at the University of the Philippines, Los Ba単os.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

Islam is a universal civilization built on the foundations of the classical world that has spread to the four corners of the earth. This book, Islamic Far East: Ethnogenesis of Philippine Islam, is a preliminary attempt to integrate/ unify the Islamization of the North, South, West, and East into one worldwide phenomenon, and locate the beginnings of Islamization in the Philippines within an Islamic historical framework. Describing the keys of Islam as a revolutionary message that linked nations in a shared civilization from West to East, from the Iberian Peninsula to China, in a global human and commercial network, the book tries to contextualize how the Philippine Archipelago became the Islamic world’s easternmost edge. Isaac Donoso teaches at the University of Alicante in Spain. Costly Wars, Elusive Peace covers two decades of armed conflict and peace building in post-Marcos Philippines. It provides incisive assessments on the major armed conflicts in the country. Articles on the debates within the ranks or between the protagonists, the roles played by civil society organizations and other third parties, the integration of combatants, the unfinished reconstruction of regional autonomy in Mindanao, and development and international assistance reflect on the other dimensions of a country grappling with the intricacies of its own wars. The author is the Chair of the Philippine Government Peace Panel in talks with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.

Eight years after community journalist Nikki Rivera Gomez came out with his first anthology, Coffee and Dreams on a Late Afternoon: Tales of Despair and Deliverance in Mindanao, comes this second volume of essays on his troubled but steadfast homeland. Mindanao on My Mind and Other Musings spans nearly three decades of the author’s insights, from a quieter Davao to today’s unrelenting progress, from college theater to threatened watersheds, from old poems to unyielding Baby Boomers, from the romance of yore to the quest for peace. This book is as much the Mindanawon’s gaze into his eventful past as it is a journey into his hopeful future.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

Virtual Nation explores “a new way of being nation that Filipinos at home and all over the world are creating in cyberspace,” as it contends that Filipinos are “still creating the nation our revolutionary forefathers envisioned and died for” … Most of the essays in this book are opinion columns originally written for online publication from 2003 to 2010. In those seven turbulent years major global challenges to peace and survival in the threefold crises of our time—ecological, economic, and spiritual—converged. Sylvia Mayuga is a long-time journalist and essayist who has written for various Philippine publications.

Retired UP Professor, Elmer Ordoñez’s new powerful collection of essays from his Manila Times column is sure to provoke debate, stir up the miasmic fog in people’s brains, and awaken the hibernating energies of our impoverished intelligentsia. From his days as Collegian editor and UP sage, Ordoñez has uncompromisingly articulated a progressive stand against obscurantist imperialist, neocolonial policies and institutions. We, his students and the youthful generation today, are blessed that in his retirement Ordoñez continues to be a militant, inspiring voice for social justice, national democracy, and liberation. May his tribe increase!—Epifanio San Juan Jr., Poet and critic

“Based on long-term and in-depth fieldwork, the author documents traditional tattooing practices and designs and explores the origins and meanings of designs. However, this book also takes into account the contemporary relevance of tattooing as an aspect of asserting identity as well as a practice that draws tourists into the region. As such, the author demonstrates comprehensively that the tattooing practices of the Kalinga have both a long history as well as a hopefully vibrant future.”—Elizabeth Ewart and Marcus Banks Analyn Salvador Amores teaches at the University of the Philippines, Baguio.

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2013 REPRINTS

2013 Reprints

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2012 ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Hoard of Thunder, together with Upon Our Own Ground (2008) and Underground Spirit (2010), completes the sixvolume historical anthology series on Philippine short stories over 1956 to 2008. The Introduction to Hoard of Thunder is an overview essay on our short fiction since 1925 to the present. Throughout the series, the stories forge from English our writers’ imagination of our own historical experience as a people: how we Filipinos think and feel about our world and so, justify the way we live. Whatever form the story takes, realist or nonrealist, you are moved by its image of a lifetime or a moment lived that the story’s words have evocatively forged; that image sums up and makes into a whole the story’s meaningfulness by which its form has been achieved. That meaningfulness too is what raises the story to the universal plane of human experience—not the realm of eternal verities, but rather the site of everlasting quest and questioning. Whatever the future holds for our country’s literature in English (in Filipino as well, and in other Philippine languages), there can be no doubt as to its continuing vigor in craftsmanship and innovation in light of, and also despite, every theory or critical orientation, because the writer will always cherish above all his freedom against any imposition of a theoretical standpoint or ideological bias in matters of content and vision. His craft is his own to cultivate and refine; he makes his own clearing within a given historical language. Gémino Abad is Professor Emeritus at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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A collection of essays that are commentaries on contemporary Philippine society. ARTS AND HUMANITIES

May mga lumang kritisismong dapat balik-balikan, para lang ipaalala ang kalagayan ng lipunan. Kailangan pa rin kasing isakonteksto ang nangyayari sa kasalukuyan, at mangyayari lang ito kung babalikan ang nakaraan. Bakit ba nagpapatuloy ang mga problema sa lipunan? Ano ba ang konteksto ng reklamo ng maraming mamamayan? Kung mayroon kang reklamo, para po sa iyo ang librong ito. Si Danilo Araña Arao ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Dililman.

A book of poetry that is a “cartography of humanscape.” Kaakibat na kahulugan ng salitang parokya ang pagkakaroon ng “makitid na isip,” isang katangian na mabisang naisangkap ni Romulo P. Baquiran Jr. sa paglikha niya ng makukulay na tauhang pinatitingkad ng kani-kaniyang limitadong pananaw. Magkakakawing ang mga tinig na bumubuo sa parokya, at sa pagsasalimbayan ng mga tulang bumubuo sa aklat unti-unting lumalawak ang ating pananaw ukol sa salimuot na bumubuo sa isang pamayanan.—Allan Popa, makata Si Romulo Baquiran ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman.

The Queen Lives Alone: Personal Essays gathers together sixteen nonfiction texts on cosmopolitan existence, people’s idiosyncrasies, poetic musings, and family stories. Through wit and humor, the author connects these four threads to tell the different facets of love—loving the self, loving the other, and loving the sublime. There are no grand events or life-changing miracles in this book— only the simplest details of the everyday, the smallest of gestures, and the littlest acts of kindness. In the end, The Queen Lives Alone is about the agonizing grace of being alone, of being alive. Ronald Baytan teaches at the De La Salle University in Manila.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Sacrificial Bodies is a comprehensive study on how the act of heroic sacrifice against foreign aggression has been transformed into a means of liberating generations of Filipinos from all forms of oppression, through the iconic pose and location of Guillermo Tolentino’s sculpture, the Oblation, within the University of the Philippines (UP) campus. The book chronicles the ideas, philosophies, and genealogy of this statue from the turn of the century to the present, combining approaches in anthropology, art history, political science, and literary theory in fleshing out the various meanings and implications of this pose. Reuben Ramas Cañete teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

Innocence, fear, and intrigue permeate this collection of interrelated stories, which span more than four hundred years, from the time of the fictional Datu Kalantiaw to the postmodern phenomenon of migrant labor. The result is a concatenation of tales, legends, official history, alternative histories, mythic and fairy-tale formulas, and all manner of discourse that the author could pull out of the cornucopia of texts that compose Philippine island life. National Artist Cirilo F. Bautista describes the stories as “a wonderful weave of history and imagination, showing Rosario CruzLucero’s expertise with language and narrative structure.” The author teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

Edel Garcellano’s poetry is deeply moving and richly peopled: here, the silenced victims of an oligarchic state, remembered by grieving survivors; there, false revolutionaries unmasked by teachers weary of miseducation. The dead and their executioners; soldiers and guerillas; activists and criminals; farmers and politicians; and everywhere, lovers lost and remembered, old and young, cruel and tender.—Felicidad Cua Lim, University of California, Irvine The author teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

A tribute of husband and wife Domingo and May Landicho to the 150th birth anniversary of Andres Bonifacio in 2013: A TV script by the husband, and a zarzuela by the wife. Ang dalawang akda sa aklat ay bunga ng magkahiwalay na panahon ng pagsulat at kapwa nagkamit ng pagkilala sa taon ng paglikha. Nagkagantimpala ang Supremo, dulang pampelikula ni Domingo G. Landicho, sa paligsahang itinaguyod ng Unyon ng mga Manunulat sa Pilipinas at UP Film Center noong 1976. Nagtamo ang Sa Ngalan ng Bayan, sarsuwela ni Edna May ObienLandicho, ng Gawad Sentenyal sa Panitikan noong 1998 sa pagdiriwang ng ika-100 anibersaryo ng Pilipinas.

Jun Cruz Reyes writes what he believes a “modern epic” of the nation through this biography of Amado V. Hernandez, a famous Filipino labor leader and poet who was later declared as National Artist for Literature. Sa kanyang bagong akdang ito, hangad ni Jun Cruz Reyes na ilahad ang ipinapalagay niyang “bagong epiko” ng bansang Pilipinas sa anyo ng isang biograpiya ni Ka Amado. … [Hindi] lamang matutunton dito ang “makabagong epiko” ng ating bansa tulad ng ipinapalagay ni Reyes. Taliwas sa inaasahan, lumilitaw rin ito bilang mapa ng mayaman at malikot na kaisipan at pilosopiya ng nag-akda mismo nitong biograpiya.—Dr. Ramon G. Guillermo Si Jun Cruz Reyes ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas. Widely acknowledged in the journalism community as an authority on media and press issues especially journalism ethics and professional standards, former UP College of Mass Communication Dean, Luis V. Teodoro has selected for this volume some of the most relevant and most thought-provoking essays ever written in this country on the complexities of journalism and media practice in the Philippines. While an invaluable guide in understanding the state of the Philippine press and media, this volume also demonstrates that knowledge of the ethical and professional measures used in the evaluation of media performance is critical in enabling readers, viewers, and listeners of both the old and the new media to judge the press and media for themselves.

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

This book aims to introduce classical and variational PDEs to graduate and postgraduate students in Mathematics. Part I gives a comprehensive overview of classical PDEs, that is, equations which admit smooth (strong) solutions, verifying the equations pointwise. Part II deals with variational PDEs, where weak solutions are considered. These solutions verify a weak formulation of the equations and belong to suitable spaces of functions, the Sobolev spaces. The theory of Sobolev spaces provides the foundation for the study of variational PDEs. A comprehensive and detailed presentation of these spaces and the Sobolev embeddings is presented. The authors are faculty from the UP Institute of Mathematics. The articles in Science Philippines are a compilation of Star Science articles that have been arranged under broad classifications of the sciences. Who are our writers? Dedicated Filipino scientists and engineers here and abroad who wish to share their scientific work and philosophy with the Filipino public—to heighten the awareness of our government and media leaders, private industry, entrepreneurs, professionals, nonprofessionals, and most especially our youth, their parents and teachers, of the value of science to society. Gisella Concepcion teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

What is Bikol archaeology? Is it simply an inventory of finds, a list of sites, or a display of artifacts in a museum? Is it only a narration of events, a culture-historical sequence of human progress in the region? And, if there is such a thing as Bikol archaeology, how does it relate to the archaeology of the rest of the Philippines? This book is relevant for anthropologists and archaeologists looking for novel ways by which to appreciate the deeper past of a contemporary Philippine region, as well as those seeking to develop regional archaeological studies. More importantly, it is relevant to today’s Bikolanos by presenting a more well-rounded reckoning of their identity’s past and directions for the future. Andrea Malaya M. Ragragio teaches at the University of the Philippines, Mindanao.

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

College freshman students pursuing different career courses (engineering, science, health, teacher education, or general education courses) need a strong foundation in chemistry on which to build their future learning. This book aims to cultivate in these students both functional and conceptual literacy in chemistry, learning not only its language and vocabulary, but more importantly, its conceptual schemes and organizing principles, such as the Atomic Theory, the Periodic Law, the Kinetic Molecular Theory, and the Laws of Thermodynamics. To develop procedural literacy, students are honed on the scientific processes and methods that scientists employ in searching for new information.

This manual, a companion to the book Foundation Course in College Chemistry, provides basic teaching guidelines for the chemistry teacher: covering goals, teaching strategies, concept mapping, and assessments. It also lists the main science concepts in each chapter as well as the answers to the self-assessment questions contained in the book. Marcelita Coronel Magno taught at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

MANAGEMENT AND ECONOMICS

Green Jobs and Green Skills in a Brown Philippine Economy is Dr. Rene Ofreneo’s contribution to a multicountry global study on the skills and education dimensions of the greening processes in the global economy organized by the International Labour Office and the UN Environmental Programme. This book shows how a green alignment of education and training activities can support the level and skills requirements of green/er industries, as reflected in the case studies of a copper smelter, a fast-food chain, a bioethanol plant, and an organic agriculture farm. The author is former Dean of the School of Labor and Industrial Relations in the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES AND LAW

This book looks at Supreme Court decisions through the lens of a political behaviorist without the blinders on the eyes of the law practitioner. The focus is on Supreme Court leading cases on constitutional law, because it is when the high court decides constitutional cases that it becomes a political body, for good or for ill. This holds true especially under the present constitution, which has virtually erased the fine line initially drawn under the late and unlamented separation of powers principle, such that when two political bodies meet—e.g., the Supreme Court and Congress—it results in a clash of titans, which reached its peak in the recent impeachment of a chief justice drama that has now become part of our legal history. Pacifico Agabin was Dean of the College of Law at UP Diliman. The Siege of Baler is a well-known episode in the Philippines, particularly in connection with the PhilippineSpanish Friendship Day and the 2008 remarkable movie on the siege. Using a deep knowledge of archival sources both in the Philippines and Spain, this reconstruction of the siege brings up the specific details of the complex process of estrangement between the besieged and the besiegers, and the extraordinary dedication and courage that both Filipinos and Spaniards demonstrated to achieve victory, providing a case study for knowledge of the military strategies used at the end of the nineteenth century and the role of image and perceptions in conflict resolution. Carlos Madrid is a historian, researcher, and writer.

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2012 REPRINTS

2012 Reprints

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2011 Insightful essays on the Words of the Year 2010. ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Ang Sawikaan: Mga Salita ng Taon ay isang masinsinang talakayan para piliin ang pinakanatatanging salitang namayani sa diskurso ng sambayanan ng nakalipas na taon. Ang salita ng taon ay pinipili mula sa mga nominadong salita na resulta ng aming panawagan sa mga mag-aaral, guro, iskolar, propesyonal, at iba pang may interes sa wika sa loob at labas ng akademya na magsumite ng inaakala nilang mahalaga at natatanging salita na namayani sa diskurso ng sambayanang Filipino.

In twelve stories collected from a decade of writing fiction, the much-awarded Dumaguete writer Ian Rosales Casocot attempts to rescue personal experience from the ephemera of travel and sexual limbo, and in the process makes his stories a fixative art, each one a grand evocation of style. “Beautiful accidents litter his stories, like glass shards from a collision ‌ He uses language amorously, as a lover savors a kiss, so that passion becomes as real as the rhythm of his sentences,â€? writes Timothy R. Montes of this collection of stories, where once proud fathers fade after the golden age of sugarcane in Negros, where mothers are fossilized in the celluloid memories of old movies, and where the very young play dangerous games as they hustle for sex, love, and attention in the small and weary world of university towns.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

This book is an attempt by Resty Mendoza Ceña and Ricardo Ma. Duran Nolasco, both professors at the University of the Philippines, Diliman, to evaluate the existing Filipino grammar to appreciate its important and unique characteristics that can enrich the study of the Filipino language. SARIWANG PAGSUSURI NG BALARILA NG FILIPINO PARA SA NAGHAHANAP NG MALALALIM NA KAALAMAN SA MGA GAWI NG WIKA Isang pag-usisa sa mga mahahalaga at natatanging kakanyahan ng balarilang Filipino, na datapwa’t naiiba, ay sumusunod din sa mga panlahatang prinsipyo ng wika.

In this, her latest book, fictionist/essayist/scholar Cristina Pantoja Hidalgo focuses on the women writers of her own generation who are still writing today. She describes her plan as “modest,” and her project as “six sketches” or “cameos,” which she hopes will “also recreate, albeit in fragmentary fashion, the world in which we came of age as writers and continue to work in today.” “Many of the women with whom we started our careers have stopped writing. Many of those who are still writing have chosen to live elsewhere. In a sense, we are survivors. I wanted to write about us and what has made us what we are.” The author is Professor Emeritus at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Whether in superhero costume, in cosplay, or in street clothes (or in hardly any clothes at all), each story in this collection comes snug in language and streetwise in sensibility, and engages us and sweeps us off as swiftly as an oncoming MRT Just get on, and get off on the characters and their destinations. Because we know their daydreams and wished for destinies really secretly mirror ours. And so we also know, of course, that each of these tragedies is really a victory for Carljoe Javier.—Sarge Lacuesta Carljoe Javier is an award-winning writer who teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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Winner of the Madrigal-Gonzalez Best First Book Award, a collection of stories for children. ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Tapat ba kung umibig ang tikbalang? Nagbibigay ba ng kahilingan ang ginintuang lumba-lumba? May mga gumagala bang anniniwan kung hatinggabi sa plantasyon ng tubuhan? Nakikipagkaibigan ba sa mortal ang diyos ng apoy? Nakaaamoy ba ng laman ng bata ang lobo? Bakit nadaragdagan ang bituin sa kalangitan? May mga bata bang walang pangalan na nakakulong sa tuktok ng tore? Sasagutin ng 12 kuwentong narito ang mga tanong ukol sa mga batang iniwan sa kagubatan at ang mga … nilalang na nagmamasid sa kanila sa gitna ng dilim. Si Will P. Ortiz ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman. A collection of postmodern stories of Rommel Rodriguez, a professor at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Narito ang kuwento ng isang environmentalist na may bulok na ngipin, aliping sinagip ng dunong sa tiyak na panganib, mga mandirigmang mailap, at batang manggagamot na nilason ng digmaan ang puso’t isip. May sumasayaw na anino ng mga poon, paglisan ng pag-ibig sa syudad, at paghanap sa kadugong nawalay sa kabundukan. May kuwento tungkol sa bawal at huwad na disiplina ng estado, pagbuo sa naputol na ugnayan, paglaro sa kulay ng imahinasyon, at pananatili sa kawalang-katiyakan. May salaysay para magsilbing bago ang kakaiba, lumikha ng tiwalag na tala, at humubog ng mamamatay-tao sa anyo ng mistulang pinuno ng isang bansa. Sir Anril Tiatco, a professor at the University of the Philippines, Diliman, uses two characters in this experimental play to depict the debate on what is more important in theater: text or performance. He also uses historical documents as bases for the content of the play. Ito ay isang dula base sa maraming dokumentong historikal. Mandudula ang dalawang pangunahing tauhan. Maaari silang usisain bilang “biktima” ng awtoridad at manipulasyon. Kagaya ng patuloy na debate hinggil sa “text versus performance” ng diskurso sa teatro, isinakatawang-tao ng mga ito ang debate hinggil sa kung alin ang awtoridad sa teatro: teksto o pagtatanghal sa pamamagitan ng kanilang komprontasyon sa arkayb at ng mapaglarong dokumentong historikal.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

The almanac contains the author’s personal journey as a proactive and politically aware individual, reflecting 365 days of “informed” writing. Ang Almanak ng Isang Aktibista ay babasahin sa politika ng pang-araw-araw. Ito ay pagninilay sa posibilidad ng kondisyon ng kontemporaryong buhay: ang swabe at hayagang paniniil at panunupil ng negosyo, institusyon, at estado sa isang banda, at ang pagmamahal sa buhay at imperatibo ng pakikibaka sa kabilang banda. Ang aktibistang nilalang ay natatangi dahil ito ay nagmamahal at pinipili ang buhay at pag-ibig. Si Rolando Tolentino ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman.

The book contains Rosario Torres Yu’s discussion of his research findings and recommendations on education for peace and in the use of indigenous and children’s literature to achieve this advocacy. Balagen ang tawag ng katutubong Bukidnon sa may kapangyarihang pagtipun-tipunin ang magkakaaway upang matukoy ang sanhi ng alitan at mapagkasunduan ang kapayapaan at pagkakaisa. Mag-alabalagen sana ang aklat na ito sa pagpalaganap ng kamalayang nagpapahalaga sa kapayapaan sa mga bata. Maging batis sana ang mga katutubong panitikan, at original na kuwentong pambatang isinulat ng mga Filipino, at ang panitikang kinatha mismo ng mga bata, sa pag-unawa sa minimithing kultura ng kapayapaan para sa bansa. Si Rosario Torres-Yu ay nagsilbing dekano ng Kolehiyo ng Arte at Literatura sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman. Three plays by one of the country’s foremost playwrights. Tunay na kalugod-lugod at hudyat ng mas masigabong pag-unlad ng kontemporaneong dulaan sa bansa ang paglilimbag ng Tatlong Dula ni Rody Vera, na binubuo ng Kung Paano ko Pinatay si Diana Ross, Luna: Isang Romansang Aswang, at Ralph at Claudia. May malaking ambag si Vera sa maunlad na dulaan sa kasalukuyan bilang isa sa mga punong-abala sa Writer’s Bloc, isang grupo ng mga mandudula na regular na nagpupulong at nagpapalihan para pagbutihin ang pagsulat ng mga dula. Sa unang paglilimbag ng kanyang mga dula, lalo niyang pinatunayan na matingkad ang kaluntian ng dulaang Filipino sa kasalukuyan. Makikilatis din ang ganitong kasibulan sa tatlong dulang bumubuo sa kanyang unang koleksiyon.—Rene Villanueva, Palanca Hall of Fame

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Basics of Occupational Health and Safety outlines the basic elements of implementing occupational safety and health programs in various types of industries— manufacturing, service, agriculture, mining, construction, small enterprises, among others. The solutions offered to address hazard and safety issues are exhaustive, technical, and practical, as well as cost-effective for management, and beneficial for workers. The book provides practitioners and managers valuable knowledge and skills to deal with work hazards and engage in social corporate responsibility toward their workers and the environment.

In Forcing the Pace (UP Press, 2007, a National Book Award finalist in 2008), historian Ken Fuller followed the progress of the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (PKP) from its foundation in 1930 to the defeat of the Huk Rebellion in the mid-1950s. In A Movement Divided, he continues the story until the fall of Ferdinand Marcos in 1986. The author traces the PKP’s painstaking attempts to rebuild, its conclusion of a political settlement with Marcos in 1974, and the development of the increasingly anti-imperialist stance which informed its approach to Marcos.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

In this book University of Minnesota Professor, Kale Bantigue Fajardo examines the cultural politics of seafaring, Filipino maritime masculinities, and globalization in the Philippines and the Filipino diaspora. Drawing on fieldwork conducted on ships and in the ports of Manila and Oakland, as well as on an industrial container ship that traveled across the Pacific, Fajardo argues that Filipino seamen have become key figures through which the Philippine state and economic elites promote Filipino masculinity and neoliberal globalization.


SOCIAL SCIENCES

The book, published in 2002 by Greenwood Press, has been extensively modified for this second edition, published under the auspices of the most prestigious university in the Philippines. Several of the essays in the first edition have been replaced with new essays more directly relevant to the main theme of the complex Philippines-US interaction—characterized during the twentieth century by a mix of acute resentment and affectionate imitation. A new introduction also summarizes developments during the past decade, noting that ambivalence vis-à-vis the US has been somewhat attenuated, in part by the redress of a historical wrong when President Obama created in 2009 the Filipino Veterans Equity Compensation Fund. Editor Hazel M. McFerson teaches at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. This book examines the American colonization of the Philippines from three distinct but related literary perspectives. The first is the reaction of anti-imperialist American writers Mark Twain, W. E. B. Du Bois, and William James to America’s first foray into the role of colonizer and how their varied essays, letters, and speeches provide an incisive delineation of fundamental conflicts in American identity at the turn of the twentieth century. The book then analyzes how these same conflicts surface in the colonial regime’s use of American literature as a tool to inculcate American values in the colonial educational system. Finally, Dead Stars considers the way three early and important Filipino writers—Paz Marquez Benitez, Maximo Kalaw, and Juan C. Laya—interpret and represent these same tensions in their fiction. In Things Fall Away, Neferti X. M. Tadiar offers a new paradigm for understanding politics and globalization. Through close readings of poems, short stories, and novels brought into conversation with scholarship in anthropology, sociology, politics, and economics, Tadiar demonstrates how the devalued experiences of the Philippines’ vast subaltern populations—experiences that “fall away” from the attention of mainstream and progressive accounts of the global capitalist present— help to create the material conditions of social life that feminists, urban activists, and revolutionaries seek to transform.—Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, author of Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connection The author is Professor at Bernard College in New York.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

The Rhetorics of Sin focuses on Jaime Cardinal Sin, the Archbishop of Manila, who figured prominently in the political life of the Philippines. His position as a Roman Catholic cardinal from 1976 to 2005 enabled him to influence Philippine social and political affairs. This book analyzes selected rhetorical discourses of Sin within the period 1972 to 1992. It describes the identifiable forces in configured interplay and the exigential flows of antecedents-events-consequences. Cardinal Sin’s rhetoric was created and shaped by these forces leading to a rhetorical role and persona he played within the historical configuration period. Mary Jannette Pinzon teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Traces the important role of women laborers during the American Regime highlighting the life of some women who gained prominence during that time. Binibigyang-linaw ng Babae, Obrera, Unyonista: Ang Kababaihan sa Kilusang Paggawa sa Maynila (1901–1941) ang mahalagang papel ng kababaihan noong panahon ng mga Amerikano sa Pilipinas sa pagsusulong sa mga kahilingan ng manggagawa para sa mas mataas na sahod, karapatang mag-unyon, dagdag na benepisyo, at ang paghapag ng mga partikular na isyu ng kababaihang manggagawa tulad ng hiwalay na palikuran, maternity leave, pasilidad para sa day care, at paglaban sa seksuwal na pang-aabuso. Si Judy Taguiwalo ay nagtuturo sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, Diliman. This book seeks to answer complex questions regarding the often volatile relationship between management and labor in the Philippines by following the trade union movement from 1972 to 1984 as it braves the martial law years; celebrates May 1 milestones; metamorphoses into the BMP, TUCP, and KMU, among others; and struggles for both workers’ rights and rewards—from the tiny shops along Avenida Rizal to the export processing zones, from the batilyos’ indignation Mass in Navotas to the legendary strike at La Tondeña—and along the way, leaves lessons for all employees, employers, labor leaders, and legislators today. Rose Torres-Yu teaches at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

From the first word in the “Lupang Hinirang� (the Philippine national anthem) and beyond, bayan permeates our lives and in a real sense, our consciousness. This is the inaugural volume of what is hoped to be a series of works on different aspects of Philippine studies brought together by Kamulatan (Consciousness), a studies collective. Essays in this volume seek to explore various aspects of bayan and what it/she represents. This collection contains eight essays, four in English and four in Filipino; four are written by authors residing in the Philippines and four in the United States. Damon Woods received his PhD in South East Asian History from the University of California, Los Angeles.

2011 REPRINTS

2011 Reprints

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2011 REPRINTS

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2011 REPRINTS


2010 ARTS AND HUMANITIES

This two-volume sequel anthology to Upon Our Own Ground (2008) continues our people’s story—the same complex tapestry, as in the previous anthology, of how we Filipinos think and feel about our world and so, justify the way we live. Because of the ever-present danger of arrest and torture during the years of the Marcos dictatorship (1972 to 1986), the writers were driven to other forms or guises of the short story, such as fantasy and sci-fi, tale and parable. But whatever the form, you come away from the story with an image of a lifetime or a moment lived that the story’s words have evocatively forged; and that image sums up and makes into a whole the story’s meaningfulness by which its form has been achieved. That meaningfulness too is what raises the story to a universal plane, which is not the realm of eternal verities but rather, the site of everlasting questioning. Thus, illustratively, it would appear in a number of stories that the country’s true hero is the common tao for their underground spirit of endurance; the rebel, too, the NPA cadre, would be ennobled during those oppressive years of martial law by their struggle for a just and humane society. Gémino Abad is Professor Emeritus at UP Diliman

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

A collection of essays on nationalism, history, education, language and literature where National Artist for Literature Bienvenido Lumbera suggests ways toward the creation of a national culture that can unite the nation and strengthen the Filipinos’ sense of nationalism. Sa kalipunang ito ng mga sanaysay hinggil sa nasyonalismo, kasaysayan, edukasyon, wika, at panitikan, nagmumungkahi ang Pambansang Alagad ng Sining kung paano lilikha ng mga bagong tulay sa pagbuo ng pambansang kultura na higit na magbibigkis sa bayan at magpapaigting ng ating pagkabansa.

In 2005, Rica Bolipata-Santos lost her father, suffered from her son’s worsening condition, and discovered salvation in writing. In 2007, she won the Madrigal-Gonzalez Best First Book Award for her first collection of essays. According to the judges, her “provocative and well-shaped essays” were “luminous, little narratives.” In Lost and Found, Bolipata-Santos continues traveling the terrain of the mundane and domestic, still unafraid to find gravitas in the tiniest of experiences. In these twenty-six articles she wrote from 2005–2009 for the Philippine Star, BolipataSantos trains her eye on everyday things, using words to transform the ordinary into something revelatory. The author teaches at the Ateneo de Manila University.

Bob Boyer (Professor Emeritus at St. Norbert College in Wisconsin) offers affectionate—often intimate—portraits of Filipino life and culture, formed over many visits to a country that many, if not most, Americans know only in the broadest terms: as a staunch ally in the Pacific and its other wars, as the rack of Imelda’s shoes, and as the home of Manny Pacquiao. Bob sharpens that picture with factual detail, but also softens the resulting image of the Filipino with his sympathy and understanding. Whether he’s riding a jeepney, sipping iced tea at the Chocolate Kiss, exploring the mysteries of Quiapo, or marching up Bataan and Corregidor, Dr. Boyer invariably delights and inevitably instructs; sometimes—like all good teachers do, but ever so gently—Bob disturbs and critiques us with his observations.—Jose Y. Dalisay Jr. PhD, Professor, University of the Philippines Diliman

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

An important contribution to the fields of visual and postcolonial cultural studies, this book offers a rich and multi-layered look at the art and life of an important Filipina artist. Relying neither on biography nor traditional chronology, the authors instead locate their subject within a series of shifting frames that situate and resituate the artist within the prismatic spaces of contemporary global culture.—Whitney Chadwick, author, Women, Art, and Society, Professor of Art History at San Francisco State University Faludette May V. Datuin teaches in UP Diliman.

Isabelo de los Reyes, intent like the other propagandists on proving the Spanish colonizers wrong in their contention that there was no pre-Hispanic Philippine civilization to speak of, collected folkloric material from his native province of Ilocos Sur, Zambales, and Malabon. Thus one finds in this translation, information on Ilocano religion, mythology, psychology, types, customs, and traditions; selected poems of the author’s mother, poetess Leona Florentino; aspects of Zambales and Malabon folklore; and the story of Isio illustrating what Don Isabelo calls “administrative folklore.” His efforts were duly recognized, for El Folk-lore Filipino won a silver medal at the Madrid Exposition, and prizes at the Paris and St. Louis (United States of America) Expositions. Translators Salud C. Dizon and Maria Elinora PeraltaImson taught at the University of the Philippines. This book is a pioneering work on the folk poetry of Southern Leyte. It is not merely a collection of literary pieces; it also provides an explication of each literary type. With 221 riddles, 50 proverbs, 54 folk songs, 11 balitao, 11 kulilisi berso, 15 daygon with 14 musical scores for different tunes, and 3 street pageants, the book can be a useful resource and reference material for high school and college courses in Philippine literature in Southern Leyte or the region.These literary pieces, now forgotten by most people and unknown and strange to the present generation, reveal the richness of Philippine culture. Placido Go-Saga taught at Siliman University in Dumaguete.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

The articles in this collection range from heartfelt reminiscences of daily encounters from the early days, to carefully crafted tales of youthful adventure and mischief, to personal accounts of historical campus events, and sentimental tributes to beloved community figures. All of these essays pieced together form a colorful tapestry of experiences that not only captures a pocket history of the University of the Philippines, but reflects the pioneering spirit and rich character of those who, literally, first broke ground in this campus and laid the foundations of what (long-time campus denizen) Narita Gonzalez sometimes refers to as a campus “communiversity.”—from the preface

A disturbing phone call in the dead of night launches young Rafael Torrecarion on a rescue mission in Negros Occidental. Returning to his hometown leads him deep into the tortured history of the Torrecarions, where lies a web of long-buried secrets, preserving and threatening the foundations of his family. “Groyon’s familiarity with the Bacolod matrix of manners— surreally rich scions, weird personalities, outrageously decadent lifestyles—has endowed him with the rich material to mine and/or undermine for his fiction. The Sky over Dimas reads exceedingly well, with its stylized construction serving the clear and illuminating prose as fine form perfectly following fluid function.”—Alfred A. Yuson, Palanca Hall of Fame Author Vince Groyon teaches at De La Salle University The most comprehensive bibliography of Filipino novels compiled so far, this book lists the novels in Tagalog (Filipino), Tagalog (Filipino) translation, and English published in the Philippines during the twentieth century. It provides essential bibliographical information for each novel, which taken collectively offers a record of the literary activity and production insofar as the genre is concerned during the period covered. This information could serve as a basic tool for further research and study on Philippine literary history, criticism, and bibliography, and as reference material for literary anthologies, textbooks, and other such efforts. Patricia May Jurilla teaches in UP Diliman.

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A novel based on the colonial situation of the Philippines. ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Nakaugat ang Duguang Kamay sa Nilulumot na Pader sa kolonyal na kasaysayan ng bansa at sa mayamang alamat ng lahing Pilipino. Magpapatuloy ang paghihimagsik ng lahi ng Sol hanggang umiiral sa balintunang lipunan ang mga puwersa ng pang-aalipin at pagsasamantala hanggang makarating at makapamuhay ang masang sambayanan sa pinakamimithing Komunidad ng Liwanag— isang sosyedad na mapayapa, makatarungan, maunlad, demokratiko, at pinamamayanihan ng lantay na hustisya sosyal. Isang nobela itong tungkuling basahin ng sinumang makabayan upang higit na maunawaan ang puno’t dulo ng pagrerebelde ng mulat at progresibong mga sektor ng lipunan.—Rogelio L. Ordoñez Even when he was my student, I’d always appreciated Lorenzo ‘Third’ Paran for his quiet, pensive prose, and with this first book—a collection of blog entries about adjusting to life as an immigrant in America—(Paran) sustains my interest and admiration. It’s an experience that’s been told many times before by other writers, and indeed the continuing diaspora is the great Filipino story of our time. But Paran brings to it a wry and gentle humor, provoked by the condition of always being in the present and yet also always in transition. The author marvels at his inevitable transformation into a twenty-first century American, but for those who fear that Paran may have lost his Pinoyness, read the book to see how and why the Pinoy endures, not by clinging to his old self, but by adapting, as Paran does, to the new.—Jose Y. Dalisay Jr., University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City Dangerous Liaisons studies the narrative of the nation as inscribed in the novels written by Philippine women and published from 1993–2006. Given the traditional inscription of women in the discourse of nation, the study looks at how women are discursively deployed in the name of the nation and the nation-state. The study, thus, explores specific issues borne out of the interlocking masculinist discourses on the nation and on women/ women’s body/gender. In exploring these issues, the analysis of the novels shows that in gendering the nation as woman (i.e., in using the traditional masculinist womanas-nation trope), the novels critique the contradictions in the discourse of the Philippine nation. Ruth Pison teaches at UP Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

National Artist Edith L. Tiempo’s poems early provided illustrative examples of how verse can elevate itself into a convergence of Apollonian and Dionysian modes, layers, tiers of plenty. Cerebration began the quiet celebration in her works. It still does, but now both substance and technique issue from well beyond a lofty perch, ivory tower, cloud, maybe even Olympus. Here is philosophy as poetry, wisdom as poetry—with such wizened control over initial insights that are then ushered into a vizier’s pass of very thin air and the whitest light.—from the Introduction

Like its two predecessors, this book gathers together the critical writings on Filipino Cinema by current and former members of the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (MPP), this time in the decade of the 1990s. Editor Nicanor Tiongson teaches at UP Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

More stories like this should be written, and written this way—dramatic and sensitive renditions of history that take us to a Philippines most Filipinos know nothing about, but whose tribulations and triumphs continue to bear a profound impact on the nation—indeed, on our sense of a nation. Yabes presents a creative, often lyrical, narrative of life and love in a sultanate caught between past and future. Some readers might object to the fact that Yabes is not Muslim and should not have written this; but she draws on many years of sympathetic immersion in the Philippine south, in its politics and culture. The best test of this account is to read it and ask yourself if this cannot be any truer than this morning’s headline, which will tell you much less, and much less eloquently.—Jose Y. Dalisay Jr. In Below the Crying Mountain the Moro rebellion that broke out in Sulu in the 1970s and that continues to wound the nation is seen vividly through the lives of the mestiza Rosy Wright, the Tausug girl Nahla, the rebel leader Prof. Hassan, the soldier Capt. Rodolfo as well as in the quest of the book’s narrator. The personal is political as war fuels the clash of emotions, histories, and cultures.—Charlson Ong, Palanca Hall of Fame Author Criselda Yabes is an award-winning journalist and fictionist.

The book contains articles that aim to discuss the important indigenous terms from various regions and how these terms contribute to the enrichment of the evolving Filipino language. Ang “ambagan” o “ambag” ay salitang nasa bokabularyo ng iba’t ibang wika sa Filipinas. Ang ambagan ay isang “kolektibong kontribusyon na pinagkakasunduan.” Sa Hiligaynon at Sebwano, ang ambag ay may kahulugang “pagsama-samahin.” Sa Pangasinan, ang ambag ay “kumilos nang sama-sama nang walang kabayaran.” Batay sa mga kahulugang ito, masasabing angkop na angkop ang pamagat ng proyekto sa layuning matukoy ang mahahalagang salita mula sa mga katutubong wika sa Filipinas na dapat mailahok sa wikang pambansa.

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

This book is all about raising chickens and other poultry species (duck, turkey, quail, pigeon, goose, and ostrich) for meat and eggs. It contains topics that dwell on the basic and practical aspects of poultry production, particularly those related to breeding and hatchery, feeds and feeding, and flock health management. The topics are written by experts from the University of the Philippines Los Baños, with particular emphasis on production under tropical conditions. Angel Laylo Lambio teaches at the University of the Philippines, Los Baños

This book covers two highly diverse groups of horticultural crops commercially grown in the Philippines, namely fruit and plantation crops. It provides basic information about the crops and presents the state of the art in growing them. It offers students in Agriculture a comprehensive textbook for the undergraduate course “Principles of Fruit and Plantation Crop Production,” which has long been taught at the University of the Philippines Los Baños. Graduate students who need basic theoretical background in the subject will find the book a useful reference material. Professors, horticulturists, environmentalists, researchers, agricultural officers, development workers, and consultants should also find this book of great value to their endeavors. Leon O. Namuco and Calixto M. Protacio teach at the University of the Philippines, Los Baños.

SOCIAL SCIENCES

The author collected and studied the astronomical (and meteorological) knowledge of the different Philippine ethnic groups to show the extent, depth, and richness of knowledge of these different groups on this subject. Sa aklat na ito, tinipon at pinag-aralan ng may-akda ang mga kaalamang astronomiko (at meteorolohiko) ng mga grupong etniko sa Pilipinas. Una, para ipakita ang lawak, lalim, at yaman ng kaalaman ukol dito ng iba’t ibang pangkat ng mga tao sa arkipelago. Ikalawa, para ugatin sa malayong nakaraan ang kaalamang ito na patuloy na nananatili at nagbabago hanggang sa kasalukuyan at nag-uugnay sa kabihasnang Pilipino sa kabihasnan ng mga kalapit-bayan. Ikatlo, para mapag-ugnay rin ang pangkalahatang kaalaman, lalo na ng mga edukado at urbanisadong Pilipino, sa kaalamang-bayan na karaniwang di nagiging bahagi ng pormal na edukasyon.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

Research into the Philippine colonial past has taken a turn away from the strictly historiographic detailing of dates and events into cultural exploration and configuration in John Blanco’s Frontier Constitutions. The book explains the complex impact of Spanish hegemony on the consciousness of the native populace, using art works and literature as foundation of insights on the outcome of the processes our people underwent as Spain untangled contradictions arising from its diminishing imperial power in the nineteenth century with measures intended to prolong its hold on its territorial possessions away from the Peninsula.—Bienvenido L. Lumbera, National Artist for Literature The Author teaches at the University of California, San Diego While every book is the only one of its kind, we must say The Asian Religious Sensibility and Christian (Carmelite) Spirituality is a most unique attempt to articulate the felt psychological and spiritual needs and aspirations of Asians during this rapid cultural transition we are going through. Written in alternatingly vigorous, charming, profound, and even poetic prose, the writer explores, gropingly and tentatively, the Asian subconscious in the light of Buddhist, Hindu, Taoist, and Moslem cultures. In varied ways, suitable to the literary forms she uses, the book renders itself invaluable for providing not only sharp, original, and perceptive insights, but also possible models for dialogues and exchanges. While every book is the only one of its kind, we must say The Asian Religious Sensibility and Christian (Carmelite) Spirituality is a most unique attempt to articulate the felt psychological and spiritual needs and aspirations of Asians during this rapid cultural transition we are going through. Written in alternatingly vigorous, charming, profound, and even poetic prose, the writer explores, gropingly and tentatively, the Asian subconscious in the light of Buddhist, Hindu, Taoist, and Moslem cultures. In varied ways, suitable to the literary forms she uses, the book renders itself invaluable for providing not only sharp, original, and perceptive insights, but also possible models for dialogues and exchanges. The author taught at the University of the Philippines.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

This book is divided into ten chapters that are organized in such a way as to highlight the common themes and challenges during the various colorful episodes in the Philippine General Hospital’s history. From the time of the PGH’s inception up until the contemporary times, the path of modern medicine and health practices as well as the vibrant history of the medical center would intertwine and forge an infinite bond with the principal aim of safeguarding the people’s health and lives. Indeed, the hospital has remained steadfast in its commitment to the Filipino people to deliver effective health services, undertake relevant researches, continue valuable training programs, and strengthen its own governance as well. Definitely, the people’s hospital has its own narrative to tell and share with the entire Filipino nation. The columns are superior specimens of opinion journalism, the language urbane but always lucid. The learned references are always apropos and certain to be appreciated by city dwellers but perhaps out of reach of non-humanities majors. The views are unmistakably Left but they are so worded so lightly as to be acceptable to literate middle-class readers.—Bienvenido Lumbera, National Artist for Literature Elmer Ordoñez taught at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

WHAT THEY SAY The columns are superior specimens of opinion journalism, the language urbane but always lucid. The learned references are always apropos and certain to be appreciated by city dwellers but perhaps out of reach of non-humanities majors. The views are unmistakably Left but they are so worded so lightly as to be acceptable to literate middle-class readers.—Bienvenido Lumbera, National Artist for Literature

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

While writing a book on the Hukbalahap, a wartime antiJapanese resistance movement in the Philippines, William “Bill” Pomeroy met and fell in love with Celia Mariano, one of its most active women members. They were wedded twice—by a justice of the peace and by the movement to which they belonged. The Forest tells the story of the two years—1950–1952—Bill and Celia spent in the mountains with the Huks. But more than a vivid account of the physical hardship of guerrilla life, the book is a moving story of their love and their courage in the fight for freedom.

This book is a collection of selected essays of Samuel K. Tan written through the years during his life and times as chairman and member of the University of the Philippines (UP) Faculty of History. The essays are conveniently arranged from general to specific issues of the Mindanao conflict and the central relevance of the Muslim South to the problem. Because of its global ideological character, the first essay gives context to the Bangsamoro struggle which had received initial and substantial support from Libyan President Muammar Ghadafi as author of The Green Book which expounds the “Third International Theory.”

This book makes use of the historical descriptive method to describe the origins and evolution of the Americanization process in Manila in the first two decades of American rule. It seeks to describe the transformation of the city in the light of the American colonial objectives. It focuses on the sociopolitical dynamics of administrative policy on three important components of American social modernization program: city planning and infrastructure, health and sanitation, and education. The book adopts an entirely different framework by examining colonization from the perspective of crosscultural relations. It espouses an interdisciplinary approach and uses indigenous social science concepts as integrating mechanism.

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2009 ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Jose Marte A. Abueg’s poetic utterance—as “daylight’s whisper” and “pearled midnights”—assumes lyrical gravitas while beholding cages and suicides. Yet, there is no despairing in these laments, for the cited, repeated treasures of spirit lead to a reckoning of wisdom. Iridescent images open paths to insights, and from genesis to incense there is but the word as verb— “epiphany”-ing the “me” or cosmic I. There too is the extended, experimental, experiential verse collage for the self-strung namesake, which turns into a nearly epicurean tribute to the sadness of literature. From the loss that “keeps you company” to the big picture of cerebral flight, the poet splits mysteries like bamboo, to ignite eyes.”— Alfred A. Yuson, Palanca Hall of Fame The author is a Palanca and Philippines Free Press awardee for poetry. Three plays that are interrelated and considered as cornerstone in the three decades of contemporary history are contained in this trilogy: Martial Law, EDSA I and EDSA II. All of them won literary awards. Isang nobela ang trilohiyang ito kung pagmamasdan sa saklaw at pagkakawing-kawing ng mga pangyayaring nakapaloob rito: Satirika, Ligalig, at Balighô. Tinalakay dito ang middle class at ang kanilang pangarap, takot at agam-agam, pakikisangkot, pagmamaneobra at pakikikutsaba, mga lihim at pagnanasa, sala-salabat na relasyon, at pananaw sa mga pangyayaring lumikha sa kanila na pilit nilang binabago o pinananatili.

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This is a selection of some twenty-nine Arcellana short stories written and published over a period of nearly four decades. Many of these stories have seen several reprints in various anthologies and literature textbooks for Philippine schools, as well as translations from the original English into German, Italian, Russian, Korean (besides Tagalog) and published in their respective countries. The original manuscripts/typescripts have succumbed through the years to typhoons, floods, house movings, and even a Tondo fire. Happily, however, enough published material survived to perpetuate the memory of Francisco Arcellana as one of the best-loved and admired titans of Philippine letters. This collection was edited by the National Artist’s widow, Emerenciana Yuviengco Arcellana. Lola Coqueta is a lively, moving collection that stamps Isabela Banzon as a poet to be noticed, and not just in her home country.—Dennis Haskell, The University of Western Australia Direct rhythms, a wry yet loyal approach to experience and memory, oblique without evasion, and animated by the desire to free “the frog in the dry grass” of her throat, all combine to give a special kind of pleasure to meeting the poet and her many selves in Lola Coqueta.—Rajeev Patke, National University of Singapore Isabel Banzon teaches at UP Diliman.

Johven Velasco (1948–2007) left behind a draft for a book and a circle of colleagues and students who revered him for his unusual combination of talent and compassion. Although the current volume is, strictly speaking, a work in progress, Velasco managed to maintain a balance between clear thinking and a rigorous grounding in theory. Films from diverse periods and genres, along with the star personas of a number of luminaries, get a muchdeserved and long-overdue critical treatment that only a fan specialist with Velasco’s visionary approach could provide. The author taught at the UP College of Mass Communication in Diliman.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Jerry Gracio’s second collection of poetry that won him the University of the Philippines Centennial Literary Prize in 2008. “Taglay ng mga berso ni Gracio ang kapangyarihan ng mga naratibong pumupugad sa puso ng ating karanasan bilang mga mortal. Sa ikalawang aklat ni Gracio makakaasa tayo ng mga panibagong pagdulog sa mga mito at salaysay na muling tutuka, huhuni, at mananaghoy kasabay ng dahandahang paglagas ng mga balahibo katulad ng kay Icarus o ang muling pagpapaimbulog ng wakwak sa karimlan, upang hanapin tayong mga nagpupuri at nag-aabang na mambabasa, na sa pagtatapos ng bawat tula ay tila mga birhen tayong binisita ng anghel na naghatid ng ebanghelyo ng ating pagbubuntis sa nakakabaog na panahon.” In this, her latest book, Cristina Pantoja Hidalgo, prizewinning fictionist and scholar, revisits the cities she first encountered much earlier in her life. Part travel writing and part memoir, these essays combine observation and reminiscence, with insights drawn from her readings and her conversations with people for whom these cities are home. Hidalgo, whose travel essays first appeared in Manila periodicals in 1980, and now has published seven collections of such pieces, says of this book: “Perhaps I write about places as a way of making sense of the spaces I occupy now, these islands, which are and are not one country.” The author is Director of the University of Sto. Tomas Writing Center. These two plays dissect the violence inflicted on Filipinos by Filipinos. Country in Search of a Hero is a full-length satirical play on the three mortal sins of the Martial Law Regime: the torture and killing of student activists, the Manila Film Center cover-up, and the theft of the Golden Buddha, symbol of greed for the Yamashita Gold. On the other hand, A Significant Life, a full-length dramatic play, exposes how a revolution devours its own children. The questions remain: Will the revolutionary of the 20th Century become a lost specie? Will he evolve into the terrorist of the 21st Century?

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

Marcelo Adonay (1848–1928) was a major Philippine composer and church musician whose long and fruitful career stretched from the 1870s to the 1920s. As maestro de capilla of the San Agustin church in Intramuros, Manila, he presided over the musical establishment of the powerful Augustinian Order that required the performance of elaborate instrumental and choral works. The first of two volumes, this pioneering work includes five major essays on Adonay’s life, his milieu, an inventory of his extant and missing works, and musical and formal analyses of his magnum opus, Pequeña Misa Solemne sobre Motivos de la Missa Regia de Canto Gregoriano. Elena Rivera Mirano is Dean of the UP College of Arts and Letters Regarding Franz gathers memories and recollections of family, friends, protégés, and colleagues of Francisco Arcellana, National Artist for Literature. These are personal glimpses of the man who touched lives through his writing, his teaching, his being. Several of the pieces here previously appeared in printed and on-line media shortly after Franz passed away in August 2002. A few are transcriptions of spoken tributes and commemorations given at the funeral services. The others are new, written for this collection, giving voice at last to feelings long felt. Every one a story only the author could have written regarding Franz.—Mayi Arcellana-Panlilio (Francisco Arcellana’s daughter)

There is generosity and wisdom in these poems, a sense of wonder that elevates the most ordinary of things and bestows upon them a special place in the world. Informed by both intelligence and compassion, Joel M. Toledo’s The Long Lost Startle, I believe, will be considered a major work in Philippine poetry; while the angel of history sees the future by turning his back on the wreckage of the world, Toledo fixes his gaze with attention and astonishment, and in the process heralds a future with some of the most memorable poems our country has ever produced.—Eric Gamalinda, Philippine Centennial Literary Prize winner Joel Toledo is a Palanca Grand Prize winner for poetry.

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ARTS AND HUMANITIES

This book utilizes visual satire as a primary tool for discourse analysis, charting the shifting dimensions of Philippines-Japan relations as depicted in Philippine editorial cartoons from 1986 to 1998. The rationale for utilizing editorial cartoons in this study is that visual satires present implicit rather than explicit statements. Editorial cartoons, therefore, become effective media for criticism where the written language, being more transparent, has failed. The book weaves an exciting narrative of Philippines-Japan relations, revealing the sociohistorical forces at play that affected the dynamics of this relationship. The Filipino’s constructed images of the Japanese are also teased out by examining changes in cartooning conventions and editorial policies.

SOCIAL SCIENCES AND LAW

Helen Yu Rivera teaches at UP Diliman. The book contains the autobiographical account of Lualhati M. Abreu—activist, feminist, guerilla, and cultural worker—about her immersion in and deep commitment to the Philippine revolutionary movement Ang Agaw-dilim, Agaw-liwanag­­—kagila-gilalas na talambuhay ni Lualhati M. Abreu­ , aktibista, peminista, gerilya, at manggagawang pangkultura—ay malalim na nakahabi sa kasaysayan ng mga pakikibakang mapagpalaya sa Pilipinas nitong huling sandaang taon.—Dr. Caroline S. Hau, Associate Professor, Kyoto University, Japan Halos kasabayan kong lumaki sa kilusang rebolusyonaryo si Lualhati M. Abreu. Gayunma’y lumiit din ang tingin ko sa kanya nang makarating sa akin ang balitang “sumuko” siya. Mali ang balita. Hindi siya sumuko.—Bonifacio P. Ilagan, Editor A study by Apolonio Chua, faculty of the so-called “people’s theater,” in the context of the militant unionist movement. Nang manghinawa ang manggagawa sa labas-litid at taaskamaong pamamaraan ng mga unang pagtatanghal na hawig sa dulaan ng aktibistang mag-aaral, lumikha sila ng sariling mga teksto, bukod sa kinandili ang mga namana nila sa radikal at rebolusyonaryong daloy ng kulturang Pilipino sa kasaysayan hanggang malinang ang sining ng pagpapatawa, ang pagkukuwento, ang pag-awit, dulaang-musikal, imahedulaan. Mismong sa mga proseso ng unyon nalinang ang mga aktibidad, organisasyon at akdang sining ng grupong kultural. Sa salik naman ng aktor, ibang alituntunin ang umiiral. Gumaganap sila ng mga papel sa entablado sa ngalan ng kanilang unyon at simulain.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES AND LAW

An intervention into contemporary debates about nationalism and postcoloniality, this work attempts to locate the role of literary studies and the humanities in the age of globalization. Through the book’s analysis, subject and collective become sites in which multiple flows and forces interact and conflict, processes that are made legible in texts. Two acclaimed Filipino novels in English, Jessica Hagedorn’s Dogeaters and Charlson Ong’s An Embarrassment of Riches, are read as markers in the passage from the despotic national sovereignty of Martial Law to the flexible capitalist sovereignty of post-EDSA. E. San Juan is a poet, essayist, and social critic.

A critical study of the Pantayong Pananaw, a social concept which was very popular in the University of the Philippines in the 1980s. Ang akdang ito ay isa sa mga pinakakumprehensibong kritikal na pagsusuri sa kaisipang tinatawag na Pantayong Pananaw na unang sistematikong binalangkas ni Zeus A. Salazar at ng iba pang mga historyador sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas na naging laganap noong mga dekada ‘80. Ang kasalukuyang akda ay nagsisikap na matugunan ang hamon na inihaharap ng Pantayong Pananaw sa pagpapakahulugan, pag-unawa, at pagpapahalaga sa pagiral at praktika ng mga kilusang radikal at anakpawis sa Pilipinas.

In this collection of articles and essays, the author confronts a wide range of issues—constitutional theory, adjudication, legal hermeneutics, the bar exams, marriage, psychological incapacity, free speech, presidential immunity, liberalism, church and state—and takes a nonconventional and, at times, critical view of standard legal discourse and prevailing social institutions. The author approaches his subjects from an interdisciplinary perspective, articulating his positions with insights from history, economics, linguistics, and philosophy. The result is a set of views that creates novel platforms for conversation and serves as a counter-push from the pull of the mainstream. Florin Hilbay is currently Solicitor General of the Philippines.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES AND LAW

A sequel to an earlier volume, University of the Philippines: The First 75 Years (1908–1983), this book covers the period from the closing years of Martial Law to the spirited days of People Power under the leadership of UP presidents Edgardo J. Angara, Jose B. Abueva, Emil Q. Javier, and Francisco Nemenzo Jr. For these presidents, it was a momentous period for self-examination, innovation, and renewal in all spheres of academic life and national engagement. The book chronicles the events in UP’s transformation as it emerged from the dynamism of people power resurgent and renewed, recapturing the soul of its academic leadership and sense of national purpose, and becoming the national university as a fitting tribute to its 100 years of existence. Editor Ferdinand Llanes teaches at UP Diliman. An attempt by Rolando Mactal, a Filipino historian, to integrate the three disciplines of geography, medicine, and history in the study and criticism of the Philippine state of health during the American regime. Masasabing ang librong ito ang isa sa kauna-unahang pagtatangka ng isang Pilipinong historyador na tumuhog sa tatlong disiplina ng heograpiya, medisina, at kasaysayan sa pagtalakay ng isang nakapakakomplikadong temang pangkasaysayan: ang kalusugan sa panahon ng pananakop ng mga Amerikano sa bansa. Kritikal na binusisi at sinuri sa akda ang paghubog ng mga patakaran at programang pangkalusugan ng pamahalaang kolonyal sa siyudad ng Maynila mula 1898 hanggang 1918, kabilang ang impluwensiya ng kapaligiran dito. Bilanggo is the diary of a decade behind bars. William Pomeroy and his Filipina wife Celia Mariano, like hundreds of other communists and militants, were sent to prison in the early 1950s for participating in the Huk guerrilla struggle for national liberation. Pomeroy’s personal narrative of the armed struggle, The Forest, has become a classic, published in various English editions and translated into several languages. Bilanggo is its sequel, written with the same immediacy and power. It describes how the political prisoners endured stretches of solitary confinement, were denied basic amenities, and witnessed horrific outbursts of violence between warring prison gangs. But above all it depicts how they refused to be broken, or to give up their vision and ideals.

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SOCIAL SCIENCES AND LAW

This book of literary criticism by Rolando B. Tolentino invites the reader to an ideological understanding of the historical, political, and sociocultural milieu that influence literary production. Politikal na pagbasa ang asinta ng libro ng pampanitikang kritisismong ito. Politikal bilang pagkilala sa substansyang nakahihigit na kodeterminasyon at korelasyon sa loob at labas ng panunuring pampanitikan at panlipunan. Na sa una’t huling usapin, tumataya ang kritiko sa binabasa at pinag-aaralang akdang pampanitikan, at ang pagtatayang ito ang nakakapagkawing sa kanyang posisyon sa binabasa at panitikan, sa mga pwersang historikal, panlipunan, at modernismo.

In this first ever book-length study of maternal representations in Cebuano literature, Hope Sabanpan-Yu reveals the confluence of indigenous and foreign cultures and convincingly connects the theory of split-level maternity to the debate on motherhood in the Philippines. As women’s participation in social and economic affairs grew, Yu argues, so too did the social significance of their maternal relations. Focusing specifically on serialized Cebuano novels by women, Yu traces the history of motherhood and examines the maternal stereotypes including the important roles played by patriarchal and societal structures. The author is Director of the University of San Carlos Cebuano Studies Center.

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FORTHCOMING TITLES

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E-BOOKS AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING E-BOOK STORES: Amazon Flipreads http://www.amazon.com/ http://www.flipreads.com/ iTunes Barnes and Noble https://itunes.apple.com/ http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ Kobo http://store.kobobooks.com/

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SOCIAL SCIENCES

UP PRESS CENTENNIAL TITLES

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RENATO CONSTANTINO Ang Bagong Lumipas (Vol. 1) (1996)

RENATO CONSTANTINO Ang Bagong Lumipas (Vol. 2) (1996)

VIRGILIO ENRIQUEZ From Colonial to Liberation Psychology: The Philippine Experience (1992)

CESAR ADIB MAJUL Mabini and the Philippine Revolution (1996)

O.D. Corpuz The Roots of the Filipino Nation (Vol. 1) (2006)

O.D. Corpuz The Roots of the Filipino Nation (Vol. 2) (2006)


TEODORO A. AGONCILLO The Fateful Years: Japan’s Adventure in the Philippines, 1941–45 (Vol. 1) (2001)

TEODORO A. AGONCILLO The Fateful Years: Japan’s Adventure in the Philippines, 1941–45 (Vol. 2) (2001)

CESAR ADIB MAJUL The Political and Constitutional Ideas of the Philippine Revolution (1967)

TEODORO A. AGONCILLO The Revolt of the Masses: The Story of Bonifacio and the Katipunan (1996)

FLAUDETTE MAY V. DATUIN Home Body Memory: The Feminine as Feminist ‘Elsewhere’ (Filipina Artists in the Visual Arts, 19th Century to the Present) (2002)

ALICE G. GUILLERMO Protest / Revolutionary Art in the Philippines 1970–1990 (2001)

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HUMANITIES

F. LANDA LOCANO Sulod Society (1968)

SOCIAL SCIENCES

CESAR ADIB MAJUL Muslims in the Philippines (1973)


HUMANITIES

BASILIO ESTEBAN S. VILLARUZ Treading Through: 45 Years of Philippine Dance (2007)

RAMON PAGAYON SANTOS Tunugan: Four Essays on Filipino Music (2005)

SCIENCES

JOEL DAVID Wages of Cinema: Film in Philippine Perspective (1998)

74

ORVILLE BONDOC Animal Breeding: Principles and Practice in the Philippine Context (2008)

ROLANDO A. DANAO Introduction to Statistics and Econometrics (2002)

CECILIA A. FLORENCIO Nutrition in the Philippines: The Past for Its Template, Red for Its Color (2004)

VIRGINIA L. APRIETO Philippine Tuna Fisheries: Yellow Fin and Skipjack (1995)


SCIENCES

CAESAR SALOMA, GISELA CONCEPCION Selected Essays on Science and Technology for Securing a Better Philippines (2008)

LILIA QUINDOZA SANTIAGO Asintada: Mga Tula (1997)

ALFRED A. YUSON Hairtrigger Loves: 50 Poems on Woeman (2002)

GÈMINO H. ABAD In Ordinary Time: Poems, Parables, Poetics 1973–2003 (2004)

VIM NADERA Mujer Indigena (2000)

RICARDO M. DE UNGRIA Pidgin Levitations: Poetic Chroma Texts (2004)

75

POETRY

EDNA ZAPANTA MANLAPAZ, et al. An Edith Tiempo Reader (1999)


POETRY

BIENVENIDO LUMBERA Poetika / Politika: Tinipong mga Tula (2008)

FICTION

RIO ALMA Sonetos Postumos (2006)

76

MERLIE M. ALUNAN Selected Poems (2004)

J. NEIL C. GARCIA The Garden of Wordlessness: Selected Poems (2005)

RIO ALMA Una Kong Milenyum, 1963–1981 (1998)

RIO ALMA Una Kong Milenyum, 1982–1993 (1998)

VICTOR EMMANUEL CARMELO D. NADERA JR. (H)istoryador(A) (2006)

CHARLSON ONG An Embarrassment of Riches (2000)


JUN CRUZ REYES Etsa-Puwera (2000)

ROSARIO CRUZ LUCERO Feast and Famine: Stories of Negros (2003)

DOMINADOR MIRASOL Ginto ng Kayumangging Lupa (1998)

LAKAMBINI A. SITOY Jungle Planet and Other Stories (2005)

ROLANDO B. TOLENTINO Sa Loob at Labas ng Mall Kong Sawi/ Kaliluha’y Siyang Nangyayaring Hari: Ang Pagkatuto at Pagtatanghal ng Kulturang Popular (2001)

FANNY A. GARCIA Sandaang Damit: 16 na Maikling Kuwento (2007)

JOSE Y. DALISAY JR. Selected Stories (2005)

77

FICTION

ROGELIO SICAT Dugo sa Bukang Liwayway (1989)


FICTION

N.V.M. GONZALEZ The Bread of Salt and Other Stories (1998)

LUIS V. TEODORO The Undiscovered Country (2004)

CREATIVE NONFICTION

N.V.M. GONZALEZ Work on the Mountain (1995)

78

CRISTINA PANTOJA HIDALGO Creative Nonfiction: A Manual for Filipino Writers (2003)

CRISTINA PANTOJA HIDALGO Creative Nonfiction: A Reader (2003)

GREGORIO C. BRILLANTES Looking for Jose Rizal in Madrid: Journeys, Latitudes, Perspectives, Destinations (2004)

ROSARIO TORRESYU and ALWIN C. AGUIRRE Sarilaysay: Danas at Dalumat ng Lalaking Manunulat sa Filipino (2004)


MARIO I. MICLAT Cao Yu: Taong Yungib ng Peking (1999)

RENE O. VILLANUEVA Apat na Dula (1998)

PLAYS

NICOLAS PICHAY Almanac for a Revolution (2000)

CHRIS MARTINEZ Last Order sa Penguin (2003)

ROLANDO S. TINIO May Katwiran ang Katwiran at Iba Pang Dula (2001)

ROSARIO TORRES-YU Kilates: Panunuring Pampanitikan ng Pilipinas (2006)

79

LITERARY CRITICISM / LANGUAGE STUDIES

ELMER A. ORDOÑEZ Emergent Literature: Essays on Philippine Writings (2001)


LITERARY CRITICISM / LANGUAGE STUDIES

JOI BARRIOS Mula sa Pakpak ng Entablado: Poetika ng Dulaang Kababaihan (2006)

RESIL B. MOJARES Origins and Rise of the Filipino Novel: A Generic Study of the Novel Until 1940 (1983)

J. NEIL C. GARCIA Philippine Gay Culture: The Last 30 Years (1996)

PRISCELINA PATAJO LEGASTO Philippine Studies: Have We Gone Beyond St. Louis? (2008)

VIRGILIO S. ALMARIO Si Rizal: Nobelista (Pagbasa sa Noli at Fili Bilang Nobela) (2008)

E. SAN JUAN Toward a People’s Literature: Essays in the Dialectics of Praxis and Contradiction in Philippine Writing (1984)

BIENVENIDO LUMBERA Writing the Nation / Pag-akda ng Bansa (2000)

80


RENE O. VILLANUEVA and VICTOR EMMANUEL CARMELO D. NADERA JR. Ang Aklat Likhaan ng Dula 1997–2003 (2006)

BIENVENIDO LUMBERA, et al. Paano Magbasa ng Panitikang Filipino: Mga Babasahing Pangkolehiyo (2000)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: An Anthology (2007)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Epics (2001)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Folktales (2001)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Legends (2002)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Myths (2001)

81

LITERARY ANTHOLOGIES

GÈMINO H. ABAD A Habit of Shores (1999)


LITERARY ANTHOLOGIES

82

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Proverbs (2002)

DAMIANA L. EUGENIO Philippine Folk Literature: The Riddles (2005)

LEOPOLDO Y. YABES Philippine Short Stories 1925–1940 (1975)

LEOPOLDO Y. YABES Philippine Short Stories 1941–1955, Part I (1941–1949) (1981)

LEOPOLDO Y. YABES Philippine Short Stories 1941–1955, Part II (1950–1955) (1981)

LILIA QUINDOZA SANTIAGO Sa Ngalan ng Ina: 100 Taon ng Tulang Feminista sa Pilipinas, 1889–1989 (1997)

GÈMINO H. ABAD, et al. The Likhaan Anthology of Philippine Literature in English from 1900 to the Present (1998)

ANTON JUAN The Likhaan Book of Philippine Drama: from Page to Stage 1991–1996 (2000)


GÈMINO H. ABAD Upon Our Own Ground: Filipino Short Stories in English 1956–1972 [Volume 2] (2008)

83

LITERARY ANTHOLOGIES

GÈMINO H. ABAD Upon Our Own Ground: Filipino Short Stories in English 1956–1972 [Volume 1] (2008)



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