Dear Readers,
Our Guest Blogger is Paulino Lim, Jr., whose new anthology, SABONG, is forthcoming. Dr. Lim says Sabong "comes from the log of a lifetime voyage of teaching. The stories
conform to Edgar Allan Poe’s idea of the short story as an artistic composition
controlled to produce a single unified effect. The “Etc.” section sheds light
on the fictional elements, as well as history, language and philosophy."
The book has two parts. The first part collects some of his short stories, such as "Sabong," "Heart of a Banana," "Nurse Rita." The second part has essays such as "Finding Your Voice: The Bilingual Writer's Dilemma," and "Diplotic Consciousness of Overseas Filipino Writers."
Paulino Lim, Jr. is professor emeritus of
English at California State University, Long Beach. He has a bachelor's
and master’s degree from the University of Santo Tomas (UST) and a
doctorate from the University of California, Los Angeles, (UCLA). He was
a Fulbright lecturer in Taiwan, and visiting professor at De La Salle
University in Manila for more than a decade. He received a National
Endowment for the Humanities grant at Indiana University, spent a
sabbatical at Göttingen, Germany, and was the first prize winner of the
Asiaweek Short Story Competition of 1985.
He is the author of a scholarly monograph, The Style of Lord Byron’s Plays. His other published works include: two short story anthologies (Passion Summer and Other Stories, & Curaçao Cure and Other Stories); a quartet of political novels (Tiger Orchids on Mount Mayon, Sparrows Don’t Sing in the Philippines, Requiem for a Rebel Priest, & Ka Gaby, Nom de Guerre); and two dramas (It’s All in Your Mind, & Ménage Filipinescas).
He shares with us "Preface to a Work in Progress."
Preface to
a Work in Progress
Writing complements
teaching. Like its predecessors, this anthology comes from the log of a lifetime
voyage of teaching. The ports of call were: high school teaching at the Divine
Word Seminary in Quezon City, college teaching at San Beda College in Manila,
university teaching at California State University, Long Beach, and teaching seniors
and fellow retirees at the Osher Lifelong Institute (OLLI), also at CSULB. Other
ports included a sabbatical at Göttingen University in Germany, Fulbright
lectureship at National Central University in Taiwan, and visiting
professorship at De La Salle University in Manila.
The English courses taught range from technical to
creative writing and from literature surveys to literary criticism. The assignment included the supervision of baccalaureate
students teaching in middle and high schools to fulfill a credential
requirement. Courses prepared for OLLI include: “Confessional Poetry of the
English Romantics,” “Stage Drunk: Intoxication as a Dramatic Device,” and “Graham
Green’s Fiction in Film.”
The stories conform to Edgar Allan Poe’s theory of the
short story as an artistic composition controlled to produce a single unified
effect. Two works began as short stories but morphed into other forms. “Deus ex
Vulcanus” emulates a twitter text. The original dialogue for “Fiends in the
Philippines” now stands as a one-act play. The “Etc.” essays shed light on the fictional
elements, including: subject matter (“Fictionalizing Contemporary History”), philosophy
(“Heidegger and Poetry: Via Literatura”), poetics (“Zen and Literary
Criticism”), belief (“My Childhood’s Faith,”), and language (“Finding Your
Voice: The Bilingual Writer’s Dilemma” and “The Obscurity of a Learned
Language: English and the Filipino American Writer”).
The final
essay, “The Diplopic Consciousness of Overseas Filipino Writers,” describes the
psychological kinship of Filipino writers and workers living abroad. It was
presented at the Ninth International Conference on the Philippines at Michigan
State University in 2012.
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Guest Blogger, Luisa A. Igloria, "How Is it Possible to Think of Literature in Times of Calamity?"
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Guest Blogger, Brian Ascalon Roley, "Old Man"
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Filipino American Authors and Academics
In Honor of Filipino American Writer, Paulino Lim, Jr.
Recap of the Filam Book Fest
The Turkish Seamstress in Ubec
~~~
PRAISE FOR
PAULINO
LIM JR.
“What we
have in Lim is a writer of raw power and sensitivity.”
World
Literature Today
“Paulino
Lim Jr. explores with indefatigable energy the role of the intellectual in Philippine
society.”
Pilipinas
“Lim has
done a masterly job of using fiction as a literary criticism of social,
political and religious situations in the country.”
Philippine
Studies
“[Lim’s fiction] attempts to
re-examine our past history in the light of our changing consciousness of the
true meaning of our ideals and struggles as a nation.”
Philippine
Panorama
“Lim is a
master in recreating a milieu.... As expected, Lim gives us a spellbinding
story that is hard to put down.”
Philippine
Star
~~
Read also
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