
In the bustling streets of early‑twentieth‑century Manila, a fledgling writer joins the “Kami Naman” literary circle, eager to lend her voice to a growing chorus of Tagalog prose. The collection’s third volume opens with a candid self‑portrait: a modest author confronting her own doubts while observing the surge of women’s groups such as the “Liga de Mujeres Filipinas” and “Ang Babae Ngayon.” Through vivid letters and public notices, the narrative sketches the lively debates that swirl around the role of women in a society still anchored in tradition.
Against this backdrop, the narrator wrestles with the contradictions of feminism as it takes root in the Philippines. She weighs the allure of conventional domestic ideals against the fierce energy of newly organized female activists, whose writings—like “Sawing Pagasa” and “Tagumpay ng Api”—challenge long‑held assumptions. The early pages capture her evolving conviction that women’s contributions extend far beyond ornamental expectations, hinting at a personal awakening that will shape the rest of the work.
Language
tl
Duration
~2 hours (147K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Tamiko I. Rollings, Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was made using scans of public domain works from the University of Michigan Digital Libraries.)
Release date
2013-05-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
Known today for the Tagalog novel Agawan ng Dangal, this early Filipino writer is remembered through a work that blends romance, social pressure, and questions of honor. Very little confirmed biographical information is easy to find, which gives the book an added sense of literary rediscovery.
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