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Published byMaud Douglas Modified over 9 years ago
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Biography Born in 1941 a multi-awarded Filipino poet fictionist critic writer of nonfiction
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Educational Background (1963; Magna Cum Laude) AB Literature from the University of Santo Tomas. (1968; Magna Cum Laude) MA Literature from St. Louis University, Baguio City. (1990) Doctor of Arts in Language and Literature from De La Salle University-Manila (1968-1969; Honorary Degree) Attended the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa
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Work Experience taught creative writing and literature – (1963-1968) St. Louis University – (1969-1970) University of Santo Tomas – (1970-2005) De La Salle University-Manila A columnist and literary editor of the Philippine Panorama, the Sunday Supplement of the Manila Bulletin
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Work Experience Co-founding member of the Philippine Literary Arts Council (PLAC) Member of the Manila Critics Circle, Philippine Center of International PEN and the Philippine Writers Academy. Senior Associate of the Center for Creative Writing and Studies of the University of Santo Tomas Member of Advisers and Associate of Bienvenido Santos Creative Writing Center of De La Salle University
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First Prize – Epic Writing of National Centennial Commissions Literary Contests 5 time National book award Gintong Aklat Award Hall of Fame – from Palanca Awards Foundation 9 time Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Award Gawad Balagtas – from Unyon ng Manunulat ng Pilipinas Makata ng Taon 1993 Adopted Son of Iligan City 1997 – for contribution in development of creative writing in Mindanao. Gawad Manuel L. Quezon 1996 – from Quezon City Government AWARDS/HONORS/DISTINCTIONS
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St. Miguel Febres Cordero Research Award SY2002-03 – from DLSU (creative writing) First Annual Dove Award (for energizing the writing life in campus) – from DLSU Most Outstanding Achievement Award in Literature 1996 – from Philets-Artlets Centennial Alumni Association of UST Most Outstanding Alumnus Award for Literature – from Mapa high School Alumni association 1983 and Graduate School Saint Louis University 1975 Excellence Award – for his novel Reconstruction 1982 Fernando Ma. Guerrero Award for Literature – from UST AWARDS/HONORS/DISTINCTIONS
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Visiting Writer in Trinity College, Cambridge University 1987 – first Filipino writer to be invited Seminar on Contemporary Literature – through the british council Honorary Fellow in Creative Writing – from State University of Iowa, USA 1969 AWARDS/HONORS/DISTINCTIONS
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Interviews with Cirilo “you can invent historical fact and say this is poetry anyway, so I invent these events” “I am writing not about the history of this people but the development of their soul” “you can get some idea about the poem by reading it, but the true test of a poem is in hearing” Used to write in Tagalog in 1960s but shifted to English because of pressure
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Interviews with Cirilo “The poem is a social artifact.” “He creates the poem from his social background, and by that I mean economic, ecological, ideological, politics, and so on, all the factors that make him a social animal.” “seeing things beyond their literal surface, that’s poetic”
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Writing Style Says what everyone feels Analogous to life “Poems are written about the most ordinary things that happen in the most ordinary way – as seen in a extraordinary manner.”
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Themes Politics Government Activism Voice of the people
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Major Works Kung Paano Matatamo Ang Katahimikan Sa Mundo Charts Pedagogic The Sea Cannot Touch A Man Falls to His Death Walking Around in Brussels Dead Weight: In Memoriam Excerpt from Telex Moon (Part Three) The Trilogy of Saint Lazarus Excerpt from Sunlight on Broken Stones
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam Dead weight – Oppressive burden – Difficulty In Memoriam – Ferdinand Marcos For Marcos administration
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam A death that stuns the wheels of government And carves enmity in the hearts of men— How do we sing the darkness in this thing? There is a need to fix our voice against
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam The weight of our loss, so that all in all, As we polish the weapons to blast the threat Of his ghost, our discourse does not disclose Our kinship with his blood, but from monstrous
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam Corners of memory bring out poisoned Phrases to fling at his flesh—“Thief,” “Scoundrel,” “Usurper of heritage”—those terrible Maledictions he finely deserves, so much
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam Did he trick us in his long governance. We will yield no quarter in this noble fight To cleanse history of his stench! Let him rot Abroad, let his brood burn in our anger’s heat,
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam Let us persecute his friends—those blind lackeys Who still lick his prints! An eye for an eye... Bah! He started it all, and the law upholds The virtue of our violence. Let us then
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam Be firm: our vision of one happy nation Founded on Faith, Honor and Justice must not Be shaken by this abominable Carcass or the pleadings of his clan—lock
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Dead Weight: In Memoriam The waterways, patrol the air, check the land— He Must Not Come Home, He Must Not Rest in Peace!
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