Guerrilla Conversions in Jessica Hagedorn and José Rizal: The Queer Future of National Romance

2016 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 330-349
Author(s):  
Renee Hudson
Author(s):  
Charles M. Tung

This chapter begins with the way Wesely’s record-breaking pinhole photographs from Open Shutter (2004) use the effect of blur to connect relative rates of movement to larger histories as such. Similarly, Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury (1929) is focused on racialised time lag not simply between two points on a single historical line, but between different histories that move at different rates and go their own ways. Here, the temporal aspect of double consciousness – of always living in someone else’s time and yet also located in a distinctive history marked by laggy access – connects with postcolonial treatments of time lag and the way in which historical behindness opens onto the tangle of histories that appears synecdochically in the plane of the present as heterogeneity. Finally, Hagedorn’s Dream Jungle (2003) stages the collision, overlap and differences between the story of Magellan’s ‘discovery’ of the Philippines, the 1970s hoax of the uncontacted ‘Stone Age’ Tasaday people, the filming of contemporary US history in Apocalypse Now in Mindanao, and the long-running Moro insurgency. Each of these texts contains a bullet-time scene in which the dilation of the encounter of disjunctive rhythms reveals a heterochronic assemblage of time-paths and historical frames.


Author(s):  
Harrod J. Suarez
Keyword(s):  

The conclusion draws attention to an unlikely figure to nominate as ushering in the diasporic maternal: the national hero José Rizal. The figure of Rizal looms large over the nation and those in the diaspora; like the nation itself, his figure remains prominent. This final chapter examines an important essay where he articulates the obligations of Filipina mothers toward an incipient nationalism, which may be understood as one origin for the politicized claims made upon diasporic maternal figures. Given this genealogy, it becomes crucial to rethink the nationalist archive, and the Epilogue that follows briefly considers Rizal’s death in order to claim him not as the father of the nation, but as a diasporic maternal figure.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 72-81
Author(s):  
Christine Bacareza Balance

On October 30, 1975—a historical pivot point between 1930s film noir and 1990s gangsta rap— Bay Area poet Nashira Priester introduced to San Francisco State University’s (SFSU) Poetry Center audience the city’s latest musical outlaws: the West Coast Gangster Choir, a multi-racial ensemble of vocalists and musicians led by then-emerging poet Jessica Hagedorn. This article chronicles Hagedorn's development as a poet and performer, analyzing the cultural and political work done by the Gangster Choir as a Third World movement with an internationalist perspective on local issues.


1958 ◽  
Vol 258 (10) ◽  
pp. 492-493
Author(s):  
R. L. Van Citters
Keyword(s):  

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