No. 2 Cover Image

No. 2

Volume: 43 (1995)

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. 43, No. 2 (1995)


Articles

Procopio Solidum: A Negrense Poet

Regina Garcia-Groyon

139–161

Jose M. Tagawa and the Japanese Commercial Sector in Manila, 1898-1920

Yoko Yoshikawa

162–194

Filipino Religiosity Some International Comparisons

Ricardo G. Abad

195–212

Gender-Sensitizing Initiatives in the Philippines

Andrea Lee Esser

213–230


Texts and Documents

Bago Mythology and the Ecosystem

Florentino H. Hornedo

231–244


Notes and Comments

Filipino Reactions to Philippine Chinese Investments in China

Willy Lim Laohoo

245–259

Women, Development, and Human Rights: The Philippine Experience

Ilka Bailey-Wiebecke

260–266


Book Reviews and Notes

Emergent Voices, by Thelma Kintanar et al.

Susan Evangelista

268–269

The Week of the Whales, by Leoncio Deriada

Jonathan Chua

270–274

Mindanao: Land of Unfulfilled Promise, by Mark Turner et al.

Ghislaine Loyré

274–275

Global Dreams, by Richard Barnet and John Cavanagh

Gerald Sussman

275–278

Guerilla Memoirs, by Dominador Ilio

Philippine Studies Editorial Team

278


Contributors

Contributors

Contributors to Volume 43 number 2 1995

279


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