Philippine Studies
Philippine Studies
Philippine Studies
http://www.philippinestudies.net
Fri June 30 13:30:20 2008
REVIEW ESSAY
To be sure, all of the essays included in this collection are still use-
ful, even if only as texts that reveal the concerns of literary scholars of
the early 1990s when postcolonialism first came into vogue. Still, there
are questions that must be answered to gauge the value of the reissue.
Will it help readers come to an understanding of the phenomenon of
postcolonialism? Does it track the sigdicant changes postcolonial critical
practice has undergone in the past ten years? Are the essays good
models of postcolonial criticism?
Like most collections, this one is uneven, so that the answers to these
questions are ambivalent.
Six of the ten essays introduce and propose new (post-1960s)
approaches to the study of both mainstream and marginalized texts
(oral culture, emergent literature, English studies, people's theater,
and so on). The essays overlap and convey essentially the same point:
marginalized texts need to be studied. Two of the essays are "read-
ings" of Philippine literary texts. One essay is an overview of Phil-
ippine-Chinese literature; and one essay, Helen E. Lopez's "The
Filipino Encounter with American Literary Texts in a Time of Cri-
sis," presents a seemingly new but actually pre-postcolonial approach
to mainstream literature.
The central concern of "The Filipino Encounter with American
Literary Texts in a Time of Crisisn is how American literature can be
relevant at a time when "themes addressing the regressive impact of
American imperialism on the growth of our nationhood in much of
Philippine writing in recent years have become as f d a r as stereotypes"
(110). Instead of assuming that American literature is an instrument of
domination, however, Lopez's program rests on premises that are a
throwback to the time of Horace: literature as a source of inspiration.
She says, for example, "To comprehend what kept the American people
together during the dark days of their civil war . . . we can find mean-
ingful answers in Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage or John
Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrathn (112). Although she does mention the new
interest in American minority literature and the use of the new
approaches to reading literature, the focus of her discussion remains the
potential of literature to "foster in us a largeness of spirit'' (112). Even
given Legasto's already broad and gratuitously accommodating definition
144 PHILIPPINE STUDIES 54, no. 1 (2006)
not make a clear enough link between oral tradition and popular culture
but does, however, provide a good discussion of popular culture in
Third World settings and an accurate description of popular culture in
the Philippines. He contrasts two views of oral culture, written ten years
apart, by E. Arsenio Manuel and Nick Joaquin. He critiques Joaquin's
view for its lack of a sense of historical reality and calls upon scholars
to approach oral tradition with cogent sociohistorical-anthropologic
research.
Heuristically, the most useful of the essays that propose new
approaches is Legasto's "Literature from the Margins: Reterritorializing
Philippine Literary Studies." It provides an account of the dramatic
transformations in literary studies as well as a helpful explanation of crux
of the change-the idea of literature as discourse. Using Lloyd and
JanMohamed's discussion of major, minor, and minority literature,
Legasto examines these same categories as they apply to the Philippines
and comes up with a different formulation. For Legasto, "major" litera-
ture in the Philippine setting is still Western literary texts that are
taught in school. Legasto's category of "minor" literature refers to
literature that "elicits the Filipino acquiescence to what are actually
iniquitous social relations" (50). For Legasto, "minor" literature in
the Philippines is that which is predominantly written in English.
Finally, "minority" literature, for Legasto, refers to not just literatures
written in "languages of 'minoritized' peoples" but to articulations
of "individuals and groups whose identities have been fractured by
the imposition of a 'common (Western) norm' of identity" (51). Her
examples for these are underground literature and people's theater. She
calls for the "celebration of minority literatures," the opening up of
literary studies through the study of literature as discourse. This call
seems to be the organizing principle of the collection, somewhat
tiresomely repeated throughout most of the essays. It is a call that
in the mid-1980s was radical but which, by the early 1990s (when this
book was first published), had gained acceptance and which in the
new millennium is de rigueur.
In 2002, more than fifteen years after she first published Sexual/
Textual Politics, Tori1 Moi reissued her ground-breaking work sans
REVIEW ESSAY 147
revisions. She says that, although she was tempted to rework the origi-
nal text, she elected not to because the questions raised in the book "are
now considered necessary starting points for understanding later devel-
opments in feminist theory" (173). She does, however, for her 2002
reissue include a lengthy afterword that includes a comprehensive
account of the change in the cultural context from when it was first
pubhhed to when it was reissued. T h account explains why her book,
which was cutting-edge in 1985, is now a textbook. The book may not
have changed but the world around it c e r t d y did, and Moi's afterword
is an honest estimation of the value of the book then and now.
One wishes the same could be said for Philippine Postcolon2al Studies. In
the eleven years since it was first published, the changes not only in the
field of postcolonial studies but also in feminist criticism, English-
language studies, regional literature, Chinese-Philippine literature, and
cultural studies have been far-reaching and transformative. Publication
outfits have been built around these new discourses, syllabi have been
radically changed, English departments have been beleaguered, and
advocates discredited or fired then lionized. "Post-" anything has
become obligatory-to the point that there are now whole discourses
doubting the worth of these new discourses. This dynamism is absent
in this reissue. The "Preface to the Second Editionn would have been
a perfect venue to track these changes and to offer an analysis of the
current state of postcolonial criticism and its future directions. Instead,
one of the collection's editors, Priscelina Legasto, gives us a laconic "I
stand by my assertions articulated in this book's 'Introduction' and
'Literatures from the Margins"' (viii). This is followed by the remark,
"The Editors deliberately included a rather lengthy 'notes on the
contributors' section to give our readers additional bibliographic sources
including titles of publications . . . past conferences, symposia, and
lectures, here and abroad, where new insights on Philippine Postcolonial
Studies were disseminated by our scholars" (viii). From a tasteful two
sentences per contributor in the first edition, the reissue now has an in-
digestible two pages per contributor. Indeed, one wishes that the
dynamism in the contributors' careers could have rubbed off on this
reissue's portrayal of Philippine postcolonial studies.
PHILIPPINE STUDIES 54, no. 1 (2006)
References
Eagleton, Terry. 1999. In the gaudy supermarket. Review of "A critique of post-
colonial reason: Toward a history of the v+ present." London Reuiew of
Books 21. Online, http://www.lrb.co.uk/v21/n10/print/eag10.html,ac-
cessed 18 Mar. 2005.
Guillermo, Alice G. 1997. Imperialist globalization and culture. Dtlimun R&
45(1): 9-19.
Moi, Toril. Sexd/tsctdpoliticr. 2d ed London and New York: Routledge.
San Juan, Jr., E. 1995. Against postcolonial theory: The challenge of the Phil-
ippine revolution. Dtlimun Revim 43(3-4): 5547.
Slemon, Stephen. 2001. Post-colonial critical theories. In P ~ l o n i adisco~m
l An
anthology, ed. Gregory Castle, 100-16. Word: Blackwell.