u.p. arts and letters and u.p. diliman centennial graduation rites
more great pics and videos coming soon!
Labels: centennial, graduation, u.p. college of arts and letters, university of the philippines
jose wendell capili
Labels: centennial, graduation, u.p. college of arts and letters, university of the philippines
Writing for Performance with Pascal Daantos Berry Event 246 | |||
Pascal Daantos Berry is the writer of the critically acclaimed theatre production The Folding Wife. This session explores writing for contemporary performance in a multi-artform context and is illustrated with video recordings from a 2007 performance of the play. Berry discusses his practice, with a focus on the very specific writing required for the development of The Folding Wife script into a theatre production. He speaks with Jose Wendell P. Capilli. The event also marks the Blacktown launch of Salu-Salo – an anthology of contemporary Philippine Australian writing. The anthology of creative writing by Filipino migrant writers in Australia aims to heighten the consciousness of Australians about the positive contributions of various Philippine communities in Australia. | Participants Pascal Daantos Berry, Jose Wendell P. Capili (facilitator) When Saturday, May 24 2008 15:30 - 16:30 Where Blacktown Arts Centre 78 Flushcombe Rd Blacktown Venue and Transport Info... Cost Free Bookings 9839 6558 | ||
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Salu-Salo: in Conversation with Filipino-Australian Writers Event 314 | |||||||
As part of its commitment to give voice to local communities, Casula Powerhouse partners with Blacktown Arts Centre to publish Salu-Salo, the first-ever anthology of Filipino-Australian writing. The anthology reveals the positive contributions of various Philippine communities and addresses current and past generations' processes of integration into multicultural Australia. The event will bring together writers Merlinda Bobis, Cesar Leyco Aguila and Robert Nery to start the conversation with anthology editor, Jose Wendell Capili. The talk will be followed by the launch of the anthology. | Participants Merlinda Bobis, Robert Nery, Cesar Leyco Aguila, Jose Wendell P. Capili (facilitator) When Sunday, May 25 2008 15:00 - 17:00 Where Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre 1 Casula Road Casula Venue and Transport Info... Cost Free Bookings essential 9824 1121 reception@casulapowerhouse.com | ||||||
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Spotlight on Asia Event 269 | |||||
Jose Dalisay Jr was shortlisted for the 2007 Man Asian Literary Prize for Soledad's Sister which offers an unillusioned, compassionate portrayal of contemporary society from a Philippines perspective. David Davidar’s unflinching novel is set among the Bombay riots of the 1990s. The Solitude of Emperors is about what drives fundamentalist beliefs and what makes someone driven, bold or mad enough to make a stand. Felix Cheong is a Singaporean poet whose recurrent themes include love, the act of writing and humanity. Jose Dalisay Jr, David Davidar and Felix Cheong discuss their work. | Participants Felix Cheong, David Davidar, Jose Dalisay Jr When Sunday, May 25 2008 09:30 - 10:30 Where Sydney Theatre, Richard Wherrett Studio 22 Hickson Road Walsh Bay Venue and Transport Info... Cost $15/$10 Bookings 9250 1988 www.sydneytheatre.org.au | ||||
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Cultures Intertwined: Junot Díaz and Jose Dalisay Event 316 | |||
Junot Díaz’s The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is a multi-generational tale about the de Leon family whose lives are split between the Dominican Republic and New Jersey, while the shadow of the dictator Rafael Trujillo hovers over the story like Sauron. Jose Dalisay Jr’s Soledad’s Sister was shortlisted for the 2007 Man Asia prize. It begins when a casket arrives at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila, bearing the body of one among over 300 overseas workers who return as corpses at Manila’s airport every year. Junot Díaz and Jose Dalisay discuss their award winning novels that cross time and space, and deal with the products of two cultures. | Participants Junot Díaz, Jose Dalisay Jr When Sunday, May 25 2008 15:30 - 16:30 Where Pier 2/3, Downstairs Pier 2/3, Hickson Road Walsh Bay Venue and Transport Info... Cost $15/$10 Bookings 9250 1988 www.sydneytheatre.org.au | ||
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Labels: filipinos-australians, jose y. dalisay jr, sydney writers festival
Writer Marianne Villanueva (Mayor of the Roses) is doing another reading this week (with Nona Caspers) at the Book Passage in the Ferry Building in San Francisco on Wednesday April 9th at 6 p.m., so I thought it would be a great time to kick off a new literary feature - The WRITE Questions - where we ask Asian American writers a few pressing questions. Marianne was gracious enough to respond from a trip to Tel Aviv, and on the way back to California in the Frankfurt airport.
1. What was the last book you read? What are you reading now?
MV: OK, the last book I finished reading (two days ago) was The Big House: A Century in the Life of an American Summer Home by George Howe Colt, which was an absolutely fascinating dissection of a period of time and a culture (Boston Brahmin) that is as exotic to me as, say, the culture of the Andaman Indians or the Aleutians or whatever. And it has given me lots of ideas about how to go about doing a dissection of my own culture (Filipino Negrense, that is: Filipino from the island of Negros, which is in the middle of the Philippine archipelago).
The book I've just started (at 3 a.m. on Apr. 2, I have terrible insomnia) is Penelope Lively's The Photograph, and it's (so far) a very "British" novel about a cuckolded husband. And again I'm finding all sorts of interesting ways in which Lively manipulates mood and memory, that help me in writing what I think I am trying to write.
2) Do you identify as an Asian American writer? Why or why not?
MV: Yes, I identify myself as an Asian American writer, because, well, just look at me, that's who I am — not only physically, but also culturally. But, even more important than identifying myself as an Asian American writer is identifying myself as an Asian American WOMAN writer; there's loads of difference between male and female Asian American writers.
3) Do you have a blog?
MV: Yes, I do. And it's somewhat of a guilty pleasure. Because everything I put on that blog is so instantaneous. And I find the process of maintaining it so wonderfully liberating.
3A) Does having a blog affect or interfere with your writing?
MV: Well, I always think that it interferes with my writing, so I'm constantly trying to cut down, to impose some kind of discipline on how often I post. But I'm not sure if my feeling that it interferes with my writing is accurate. Of course, when I'm blogging, I'm not working on my short stories, but the blog actually uncovers veins of feeling and situational nuances, that I had never been able to write about before. So, in that way, it's liberating. And in addition, when writing my blog, I am careful to maintain a persona ("Self") whose voice is very distinct from the voice/s in which I write. It's a more antic, tongue-in-cheek voice. I love creating this voice, and even though the posts are so spontaneous, there is a kind of discipline and art imposed on them, too. Another thing: I think writing the blog has helped me expand into new modes of writing. For instance, I've found that I can actually write plays! I don't know why I only discovered this AFTER I started creating my blog. Whether one has anything to do with the other, or whether it's mere coincidence, I'm not sure. But I tend to think: everything's connected.
3B) What blogs/websites do you frequent?
MV: * Amazon, not to look up my own book ratings (though I do occasionally, I'm only human!), but to read reviews of books I am currently reading. For instance, right now I am halfway through The Photograph — it's the only book I brought to read on the plane — and I STILL don't like it. So, I try and read what others have said about it on Amazon, and it's really amazing to me that most people call it "brilliant", etc. So obviously there's some disconnect there, and maybe I'm going about the book in the wrong way. And this forces me to read with more patience.
* For fun: Box Office Mojo, Buzzsugar, and Gawker.
* I like looking at Gerry Ruiz's photoblog. As far as I can make out, he's a photographer based in Tacloban City in the Philippines, and he always posts pictures of such interesting places.
* I like Michael Janairo's blog. He writes about books and culture for the Albany Times-Union.
* I like Speechless, which I just discovered last month.
* I like Lavalady's blog, especially when she gets raw (emotionally) and when she blogs about movies she's seen.
* I think Jean Vengua's Okir blog is mysterious and alluring.
* To find out what's going on in Manila, I like Wendell Capili's blog and Dean Alfar's blog.
* And Luisa Igloria's Lizard Meanders blog is packed full of information, about writers, process, family, and events, as well as wonderful poetry.
* Kathleen Burkhalter's A Glass Overflowing blog is the best blog about family life that I've ever encountered, and I read it to imagine myself in the warmth of this woman's fullness and generosity.
* I read the Chancelucky blog and am absolutely fascinated by his posts about his mother.
* Don’t get me started on food blogs, I especially like Eating Asia and Iskandals.
* Of course I read Hyphen's blog to check out what's new in San Francisco events, and for the interesting articles!!!
Labels: asian american writers, filipino american writers, marianne villanueva, san francisco
Labels: antonio hidalgo, milflores publishing, philippine culture, philippine literature
Labels: sid gomez hildawa