You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Selected Ilokano poetry by Roy Vadil Aragon Introduction by Daniel L. Nesperos ISBN 978-971-9692-40-9 2019 Produced by Imnas & Iway Publications, published by Saniata Publications
Poems in English and Ilokano by Roy V. Aragon
RABII 100 a #tweetniw A collection of 100 short Ilokano poems posted as tweets on Twitter by Roy V. Aragon Introduction by Aurelio Solver Agcaoili ISBN 978-971-9692-39-3 2019 Produced by Imnas & Iway Publications, published by Saniata Publications TI MAKUNADA: Malagipko ti E = mc2 ni Einstein gapu kadagitoy tweetniw ni RVA. Iti uppat laeng a kurdit (characters), nabukel ti kalatakan nga equation iti sangalubongan a maysa kadagiti imbungana ti pannakapataud ti bomba atomika. Iti 280 a kurdit ni RVA, naipasngay ti 100 a daniw iti sabali a sukog a ti gilap dagiti lua, isem, ling-et, sasainnek, pannakisarsarita ti kararua iti kararua, rinaniaganda met ti dana a turongentayo tapno maawatan ken ip...
12 love poems in Ilokano by Roy V. Aragon that swell on being corny or cheesy but dwell in sentimentality, angst, isolation, misery, longing, moving on.
A collection of selected short fiction in Ilokano by Roy Vadil Aragon Introduction by Aurelio Solver Agcaoili "Bannuar ken Dadduma Pay a Fiksion confirms Roy Vadil Aragon’s stature as the finest Ilokano writer of his generation. His vision is brave, his imagination fearless, his language masterful. He dwells on enduring themes—oppression, injustice, marginalization, to mention a few—but provides fresh insights into the human condition by writing from the perspective of those ‘insaned’ by, and who live with, structural violence. He confronts the Marcos dictatorship, rare in Ilokano literature. In ‘Pamulinawen,’ he radicalizes the ‘traditional’ and celebrates the people in wh...
A collection of new and selected Ilokano poetry by Roy Vadil Aragon.
The Promise of the Nation examines the construction of the nation in contemporary Ilokano literature in the intersections of gender, history, and nationalism by tracking its political, material, and socio-cultural connections and intervention in Philippine socio-political discourse, history, and historiography. It attends to and addresses the limitations, contradictions, and potential constituting Ilokano writers' efforts to (re)make a Filipino nation, efforts made in the context of Spanish and American imperialism, neocolonialism, martial law, militarization, urban squatting, patriarchy, migrant work, and the marginalization of ethnic peoples. Finally, the book argues that the writer' project of realizing what Caroline Hau has evocatively called the nation's "promise of community" may be more powerfully imagined and grasped were nationalism transformed by feminism.
None
Nahahati ang obrang ito sa pitong kapitulo o tsapter. Signipikante para sa akin ang pito na aking hinalaw sa Banal Na Aklat kung saan namaksimisa ng mga propeta ang numerong pito mula Henesis, sakramento, misteryo, at maging sa Pahayag ay naging madiin ang papel ng numerong pito. Sa Dila, Makata, at Sarili, sentral na paksa ng mga tula ang wika/ berbo bilang kasangkapan sa pag-abot sa kaakuhan ng bayan, makata, sarili, at vice versa. Sa Para-Tula, Taon, at Mujer nama’y paglabas ng naunang tatlo sa kanilang tapayan at nakagawiang kumbensyon, moral, at ang pilit iniiwasang erotisismo. Habang sa Signos, at Karnal, Kanal, Banal ay radikal na pagpihit mula sa nakagisnan at kumbensyunal na pag-u...
Riverrun is a novel that talks about the rite of passage in the life of a young gay man who grew up in a colorful and chaotic dictatorship. Shaped in the form of a memoir, it glides from childhood to young adulthood, from provincial barrio to cosmopolitan London. Its chapters are written like flash fiction, talk stories and vignettes; interlaced with recipes, a feature article, poems and vivid songs. Riverrun marks the global debut of one of Asia's best writers.