Literature Reviewer
Literature Reviewer
Literature Reviewer
The IVATANS
- are a Filipino ethnolinguistic group predominant in the Batanes Islands of the
Philippines. The origins of the Ivatans remained untraced among scholars.
- Ivatans already lived in Batanes before the Spaniards arrived in the Philippines in the
16th century, and lived autonomously long thereafter. On June 26, 1783 Batanes was
incorporated to the Spanish East Indies. In 1571 the capital of the Spanish colony in the
Philippines was established in Manila. In 1686, Ivatans were "forced" to settle in the
lowlands of Batanes. The Ivatans were under Spanish rule for 115 years, and gained
their independence on September 18, 1898. Ironically, June 6 is celebrated in Batanes as
its founding day.
- Today, most Ivatans are Catholics, like the rest of the country, although some have not
converted practice ancestral worship to their anitos. However, there are growing
Christian denominations specially in the capital town of Batanes.
- One of the earliest accounts of the Ivatan is that of the British buccaneer William
Dampier in 1687. Dampier described them as "short, squat people; hazel eyes, small yet
bigger than Chinese; low foreheads; thick eyebrows; short low noses; white teeth; black
thick hair; and very dark, copper-colored skin." They also have strong mixture of the
short type of the Mongols, and there are some individuals who seem to have some
physical characteristics peculiar to the Ainus of Japan.
- Traditional wear: Men wear the tadidi and women wear the vakul.
-
LEONA FLORENTINO- "MOTHER OF PHILIPPINE WOMEN'S LITERATURE" and
"BRIDGE FROM ORAL TO LITERARY TRADITION".
➔ Born to a wealthy and prominent family in Vigan, Ilocos Sur, Florentino began to write
her first verses in Ilocano at a young age.
➔ She married a politician named Elias de los Reyes at the age of 14, and they had five
children, including Isabelo de los Reyes, who would later become a Filipino writer,
activist and senator.
➔ Despite her potential, she was not allowed to receive a university education because of
her gender. Florentino was instead tutored by her mother, and then a series of private
teachers. An educated Ilocano priest taught her advanced Spanish and encouraged her
to develop her voice in poetry.
➔ Due to the feminist nature of her writings, Florentino was shunned by her husband and
son, and so was forced to live alone in exile and separately from her family.
➔ Her lyrical poetry in Spanish, especially in Ilocano, gained attention with their exhibition
in various international forums in Spain, Paris and St. Louis, Missouri.
➔ Her literary contributions - particularly 22 preserved poems - were recognized when she
was included in the Encyclopedia Internationale des Oeuvres des Femmes (International
Encyclopedia of Women’s Works) in 1889. She is believed to be the first Filipino to
receive this international recognition, a homage that occurred only after her untimely
death.
AMADOR T. DAGUIO
BORN IN 1912, LAOAG, ILOCOS NORTE ,DIED APRIL 26, 1966
- He lived in the Mountain Province until 1924.
- From 1924 to 1928, he studied at Rizal High
School in Pasig.
- studied at U.P
- earned his M.A. degree from the University
of Stanford
- In Stanford, he presented a translation of
the Ifugao Harvest song, the Hudhud Ti Aliguyon.
- Daguio wrote mostly during 1930-1941.
-His works include THE FLAMING LYRE (1959), his 1st volume of verse, and BATAAN
HARVEST , which posthumously appeared in 1973.