No. 3–4 Cover Image

No. 3–4

Volume: 67 (2019)

Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints is an internationally refereed journal that publishes scholarly articles and other materials on the history of the Philippines and its peoples, both in the homeland and overseas.

It believes the past is illuminated by historians as well as scholars from other disciplines; at the same time, it prefers ethnographic approaches to the history of the present. It welcomes works that are theoretically informed but not encumbered by jargon. It promotes a comparative and transnational sensibility, and seeks to engage scholars who may not be specialists on the Philippines. Founded in 1953 as Philippine Studies, the journal is published quarterly by the Ateneo de Manila University.

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Vol. 67, No. 3–4 (2019)


Articles

Scholarship on and from the Margins: Festschrift in Honor of Resil B. Mojares

Filomeno V. Aguilar Jr., Michael D. Pante, Caroline S. Hau

279–84

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Negotiating Land in the Spanish Philippines: Cases of Land Donations and Boundary Disputes in Laguna, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries

Grace Liza Y. Concepcion

285–313

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Limahong’s Pirates, Ming Mariners, and Early Sino–Spanish Relations: The Pangasinan Campaign of 1575 and Global History from Below

J. Travis Shutz

315–42

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Beyond Racial Divisions: Bridges and Intersections in the Spanish Colonial Philippines

María Dolores Elizalde

343–74

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Gregorio Sancianco, Colonial Tribute, and Social Identities: On the Cusp of Filipino Nationalist Consciousness

Filomeno V. Aguilar Jr.

375–410

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In the Shadow of the Santo Niño: San Vidal’s Sojourn in Cebu City, 1565–2018

Michael Cullinane

411–56

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Panahon and Bagay: Metonymy and the Close Reading of Dictionaries to Understand Filipino Temporality

Christian Jil R. Benitez

457–88

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Fantasy, Affect, and Pan-Asianism: Mariano Ponce, the First Philippine Republic’s Foreign Emissary, 1898–1912

Nicole CuUnjieng Aboitiz

489–520

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The Rise of Filipino Postcolonial Knowledge: Philippine Studies, the Institute of Philippine Culture, and the Ateneo de Manila University Press

Charlie Samuya Veric

521–56

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Militant Struggles and Anti-Imperialism in Resil Mojares’s The Freeman Columns during the Early 1970s

Karlo Mikhail I. Mongaya

557–94

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Dovie Beams and Philippine Politics: A President’s Scandalous Affair and First Lady Power on the Eve of Martial Law

Caroline S. Hau

595–634

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Interview

Resil B. Mojares: Adventures and Itineraries in Philippine Cultural History

Caroline S. Hau, Patricio N. Abinales, Filomeno V. Aguilar Jr., Lisandro E. Claudio, Michael Cullinane, Michael D. Pante

635–48

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Index

Index to Volume 67

Index to Volume 67

649–52

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