No. 3 Cover Image

No. 3

Volume: 48 (2000)

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. 48, No. 3 (2000)


Articles

Childrearing Practices in the Philippines and Japan

Leslie E. Bauzon, Aurora F. Bauzon

287–314

Philippine Commonwealth and Cult of Masculinity

Alfred W. McCoy

315–346

Forest Conservation in Palawan

Dario Novellino

347–372

Old Buildings: An Economist’s View

Victor S. Venida

373–391


Notes and Comments

Teodoro M. Kalaw’s Collection of Revolutionary Notes

E. Arsenio Manuel

392–414

Manila in June 1943

Grant K. Goodman

415–419


Book Reviews

Jung Festival, edited by The Friends of Jung Society

Vincenz C. Serrano

420–423

A Normal Life, by Reine Arcache Melvin

Vincenz C. Serrano

424–425

Fil-Am: The Filipino American Experience, edited by Alfred Yuson

Ruel S. De Vera

426–427

Bikol Blend, by Norman G. Owen

Jose S. Arcilla, S.J.

428–429


Contributors

Contributors

Contributors to Volume 48 number 3 2000

430


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