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Latest Humanities Diliman issue now online

The January to June 2022 issue of Humanities Diliman (Vol. 19, No. 1) is now available online ().

Humanities Diliman is a Scopus-indexed, peer-reviewed, open-access journal published semi-annually by the UP Diliman Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Development.

Humanities Diliman (Vol. 19, No. 1) cover. Image from the Humanities Diliman editorial board

The journal鈥檚 first issue for the year contains four articles, a monograph, and two reviews.

It features the articles “Locating the Asog: A Historical Account of Philippine Gay Identity in the Spanish Colonial Period” by Francis Luis M. Torres, “Contextualizing Duterte鈥檚 Rhetoric: The Rhetorical Situation of President Rodrigo Duterte鈥檚 Public Addresses on the Philippine鈥檚 Federal Shift” by Charles Erize P. Ladia, “The 1943 Bengal Famine and the Re-Enactment of Memory: A Study of AshaniSanket (Distant Thunder, 1973) and AkalerSandhane (In Search of a Famine, 1980)” by Jigisha Bhattacharya, and “A Critique of the Theme Park Las Casas Filipinas de Acuzar Based on Some Principles of Heritage Conservation and Contending Perspectives” by Hannah Grace R. Lopez, Generoso B. Pamittan Jr., and Feorillo A. Demeterio III.

Torres鈥 article investigates within the Spanish colonial period, the asog, the earliest representation of the Cebuano gay identity in the Philippines.

According to Torres, the 鈥減aper intends to rearticulate the effects of writing and colonialism that influence current attitudes and perceptions toward Filipino gays.鈥

Ladia鈥檚 article focuses on 鈥渢he rhetorical strategies of a popular and populist public figure鈥 and addresses the question: 鈥渉ow did President Rodrigo Duterte respond to and recreate rhetorical situations in persuading the Filipino public to support his federal proposal?鈥

Meanwhile, Bhattacharya鈥檚 article centers on the cinematic memorialization of the 1943 famine in Bengal in colonial Indian subcontinent. 鈥淚n foregrounding the cultural politics of memorialization through cinema,鈥 the 鈥減aper seeks to highlight the dichotomy between the archive and its absence which characterizes much of South Asian history.鈥

Lastly, the critique of Las Casas Filipinas de Acuzar (LCFdA) by Lopez, Pamittan, and Demeterio argues 鈥渢hat LCFdA has at least five strategies for the building/rebuilding of its architectural collections.鈥 The paper 鈥渃ontains three substantive sections: an elaboration of each of these five building/rebuilding strategies, an overview of the selected pertinent documents on heritage conservation, and a critique of each of the five building/rebuilding strategies.鈥

The issue includes the monograph “Ang Paghiraya sa Bansa ni Don Belong: Pagsusuri ng mga Akda ni Isabelo de los Reyes sa Kanyang Yugto ng Transisyon (1897鈥1912),” by Leslie Anne L. Liwanag and Michael Charleston 鈥淴iao鈥 B. Chua.

Reviews of Mary Talusan鈥檚 鈥淚nstruments of Empire鈥 by Arwin Q. Tan and on Rommel Curaming鈥檚 鈥淧ower and Knowledge in Southeast Asia鈥 by Ramon Guillermo complete the issue.Humanities Diliman promotes scholarship in the arts and humanities in the Philippines, as well as international synergies, especially with scholars of Southeast Asian studies. 鈥揥ith a report from the Humanities Diliman editorial board

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