El periodismo filipino 1811-1910 : the first century of philippine journalism/ Jaime M. Marco

By: Marco, Jaime M [Translator]Material type: TextTextSeries: 1. Philippine history. 2. Press philippine history. 3. Mass media ; Volume threePublication details: Quezon City, Philippines : Vibal Foundation, Inc., c2018Description: xliv, 291 pages : Colored illustration; 30 cmISBN: 978-971-97-0705-9Subject(s): HISTORYLOC classification: PN 5423 M37 2018
Contents:
Chapter 1 : 1811 From the superior government -- Chapter 2 : 1813 News take from gazettes -- Chapter 3 : 1821 Manileno patriotic offering -- Chapter 4 : 1823 Complied News from newspapers of the peninsula -- Chapter 5 : 1824 Mercantile registry -- Chapter 6 : 1839 Current pricelist of manila -- Chapter 7 : 1843 Filipino weekly -- Chapter 8 : 1845 The friend of the country -- Chapter 9 : 1846 The star of manila -- Chapter 10 : 1847 The star, daily announcements -- Chapter 11 : 1848 Manila daily, first epoch -- Chapter 12 : 1849 The filipino instructor -- Chapter 13 : 1850 Daily announcements and news -- Chapter 14 : 1851 The filipino observer -- Chapter 15 : 1852 Official bulletin of the philippines -- Chapter 16 : 1858 The commerce -- Chapter 17 : 1859 Filipino enlightenment -- Chapter 18 : 1860 Manila daily, second epoch -- Chapter 19 : 1861 Manila gazette -- Chapter 20 : 1862 The catholic spain -- Chapter 21 : 1863 Catholic oceania -- Chapter 22 : 1864 The army bulletin -- Chapter 23 : 1865 The filipno future -- Chapter 24 :1866 Commercial journal -- Chapter 25 : 1868 Announcement daily -- Chapter 26 : 1869 The commerce second periodical with this title -- Chapter 27 : 1870 The loose leaflet -- Chapter 28 : 1874 The filipino troubadour -- Chapter 29 : 1875 The philippine journal -- Chapter 30 : 1876 The manila courier.
Summary: In the book we witness print culture slipping away from two and a half centuries of Spanish friar control, which previously had only emphasized translation and doctrinal dissemination. The nascent colonial press controlled by both public and religious authorities gave rise for the first time to a “reading public” that led to a third sphere of opinion, thus setting the stage for ambivalence, insubordination, and conflict. From being a mouthpiece for elite Spaniards, the Philippine press grew amidst political divisions to become a site of contestation between the regime and a growing nationalistic class of indios, mestizos, and hijos del país who became increasingly united and were supported by liberal Spanish sympathizers. The discourse and counter-discourse of a Philippines caught between two empires and an independent republic is mirrored in the book’s heady mixture of propagandist tracts, racially prejudiced editorials, biting satire, humorous poems, reviews of European novels, bureaucratic reports, stirringly inspirational plays and essays, costumbrista sketches, revolutionary manifestos, and endearing sundry ephemera, all of which resurrect for us the nuanced and deeply layered colonial sphere of ideas that spanned the archipelago, Europe, and the world.
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Senior High School Filipiniana FIL PN 5423 M37 2018 SHS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) c.1 Available NUFVSHS0000280

K to 12 Compliant

Includes glossary and abbreviations, directory of philippine journalism pseudonyms, appendix, bibliography, index, and acknowledgements.

Chapter 1 : 1811 From the superior government -- Chapter 2 : 1813 News take from gazettes -- Chapter 3 : 1821 Manileno patriotic offering -- Chapter 4 : 1823 Complied News from newspapers of the peninsula -- Chapter 5 : 1824 Mercantile registry -- Chapter 6 : 1839 Current pricelist of manila -- Chapter 7 : 1843 Filipino weekly -- Chapter 8 : 1845 The friend of the country -- Chapter 9 : 1846 The star of manila -- Chapter 10 : 1847 The star, daily announcements -- Chapter 11 : 1848 Manila daily, first epoch -- Chapter 12 : 1849 The filipino instructor -- Chapter 13 : 1850 Daily announcements and news -- Chapter 14 : 1851 The filipino observer -- Chapter 15 : 1852 Official bulletin of the philippines -- Chapter 16 : 1858 The commerce -- Chapter 17 : 1859 Filipino enlightenment -- Chapter 18 : 1860 Manila daily, second epoch -- Chapter 19 : 1861 Manila gazette -- Chapter 20 : 1862 The catholic spain -- Chapter 21 : 1863 Catholic oceania -- Chapter 22 : 1864 The army bulletin -- Chapter 23 : 1865 The filipno future -- Chapter 24 :1866 Commercial journal -- Chapter 25 : 1868 Announcement daily -- Chapter 26 : 1869 The commerce second periodical with this title -- Chapter 27 : 1870 The loose leaflet -- Chapter 28 : 1874 The filipino troubadour -- Chapter 29 : 1875 The philippine journal -- Chapter 30 : 1876 The manila courier.

In the book we witness print culture slipping away from two and a half centuries of Spanish friar control, which previously had only emphasized translation and doctrinal dissemination. The nascent colonial press controlled by both public and religious authorities gave rise for the first time to a “reading public” that led to a third sphere of opinion, thus setting the stage for ambivalence, insubordination, and conflict. From being a mouthpiece for elite Spaniards, the Philippine press grew amidst political divisions to become a site of contestation between the regime and a growing nationalistic class of indios, mestizos, and hijos del país who became increasingly united and were supported by liberal Spanish sympathizers.

The discourse and counter-discourse of a Philippines caught between two empires and an independent republic is mirrored in the book’s heady mixture of propagandist tracts, racially prejudiced editorials, biting satire, humorous poems, reviews of European novels, bureaucratic reports, stirringly inspirational plays and essays, costumbrista sketches, revolutionary manifestos, and endearing sundry ephemera, all of which resurrect for us the nuanced and deeply layered colonial sphere of ideas that spanned the archipelago, Europe, and the world.

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