No. 3 Cover Image

No. 3

Volume: 45 (1997)

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. 45, No. 3 (1997)


Articles

Early American Missionaries in Ilocos

L. Shelton Woods

303–328

Lumawig: The Culture Hero of the Bontoc-Igorot

Joy Christine O. Bacwaden

329–352

The Theater of Karl Gaspar: The Biblical-Religious Plays

Pamela Del Rosario Castrillo

353–384

Demographic Development in Mindoro

Jürg Helbling, Volker Schult

385–407


Notes and Comments

Cleansing the Earth: The Pänggaris Ceremony in Palawan

Charles J-H Macdonald

408–422

The U.S. in APEC

Evelyn Tan Cullamar

423–430


Book Reviews and Notes

Agents of Apocalypse, by De Bevoise

David Keck

431–434

Poverty and Development, by Castro and Crollius

Joseph A. Galdon, S.J.

434–437

Imagining the Nation in Four Philippine Novels, by Martinez-Sicat

Trina A. Pineda

437–440

Crime, Society & the State in the Nineteenth-Century Philippines, by Bankoff

Rogel Anecito L. Abais, S.J.

440–441

Bishop Francisco Claver, by Fitzpatrick

Norlan H. Julia, S.J.

441–442


Contributors

Contributors

Contributors to Volume 45 Number 3 1997

443


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