Sunday, 20 February 2011

Toward Filipino Self-determination: Beyond Transnational Globalization (SUNY series in Global Modernity)



Toward Filipino Self-determination: Beyond Transnational Globalization (SUNY series in Global Modernity)
E. San, Jr. Juan | 2009-08-06 00:00:00 | State University of New York Press | 184 | Philippines
Examines the project of Filipino self-determination in the context of capitalist globalization.
Reviews
Racism and Cultural Studies: Critiques of Multiculturalist Ideology and the Politics of Difference (New Americanists)Toward Filipino Self-Determination: Beyond Transnational Globalization.

By E. San Juan Jr. (Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 2009. 184 pp.



by Michael Viola

University of California, Los Angeles

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In his latest book, Toward Filipino Self-Determination: Beyond Transnational Globalization, Epifanio San Juan Jr. uncovers the concealed operations of power and the historic inequalities of political economic systems that have impacted Filipinos in an age of globalized crisis and contradiction. While the definition of globalization is often debated, for the majority of people in the Philippines the process of globalization can be more accurately described as "gobble-ization." Similar to the mass destruction caused in the Philippines at the wake of Hurricane Ondoy, the mechanisms of corporate globalization have enabled an international ruling class to pillage the resources of the islands, leaving behind an entire population submerged in the swollen overflows of structural adjustment, debt, and privatization. The rule of the high water is the doctrine of neoliberalism where every layer of the nation's social fabric is a site of looting, as the market has become the organizing logic of an entire social sphere. E. San Juan's book is an important contribution to the fields of globalization, race, and postcolonial studies as he foregrounds the domains of transformative possibility within culture and social life for Filipinos in a global diaspora, a population that has historically been greatly impacted by the tides of capitalist production.



This book, a compilation of essays written after 9/11 serves as a sequel to his influential writings, in particular, From Exile to Diaspora (1998) and After Postcolonialism (2000). Much like these earlier works, E. San Juan's methodology is a method of dissent that captures the complex social relations and constant motion of the Philippine Diaspora. With such a method, tension is present throughout his analysis engaging more commonly accepted theoretical frames promoted by postcolonial, postmodern, and post-Marxist scholars. He explains,



"We are not transmigrants or transnationals, to be sure, despite the theories of academic pundits and exoticizing media. We are Filipinos uprooted and dispersed from hearth and communal habitat. We will find our true home if there is a radical systemic change in the metropole and, more crucially, a popular-democratic transformation in the Philippines" (xvi).



E. San Juan argues that the struggle to end oppression for Filipinos, women, and people of color both within the United States as well as throughout the Diaspora is not simply a discursive or semiotic liberation but a global social relation. For those familiar with San Juan's earlier works there is recognizable overlap in the astute critiques that he makes; however, for a reader not exposed to the conditions and history of the Philippines or to social theory, E. San Juan's reiterations are valuable as he rigorously intervenes in complex arguments.



The chapters "Imperial Terror in the Homeland" and "In the Belly of the Beast" are important historical supplements for youth involved in organizing the popular Philippine Culture Nights (PCN); scholars of Ethnic and Asian American Studies; as well as community organizers interested in furthering political projects that counter the heightened injustices of racism and patriarchy. Throughout these chapters San Juan shows how seemingly disconnected events are linked through systemic exploitation and an international division of labor necessitated by the current global economic order. Such writings serve as a constant reminder that ecological disasters, racist anti-immigrant sentiments, and the escalating violence against women are dialectically related to the motions of capitalist development.



San Juan's chapter "Subaltern Silence" is especially illuminating for university students as they witness the privatization of their public education, the exorbitant increases in tuition fees, and the reduction of courses offered in the humanities and languages. Even though Filipinos have become one the largest Asian American groups in the United States, Filipino language instruction in the academy is sparse. San Juan argues that the struggle over language in our schools is a struggle over Filipino identity - an identity that must be rooted in the ideas of liberation, democracy, and justice for Filipinos throughout the world. He states, "literacy must be based on the reality of the subaltern life if it is to be effective in any strategy of real empowerment, in the decolonization of schooling for a start" (50). However, the struggle for Filipino languages cannot be confined solely within institutions of higher learning. San Juan argues that the struggle for Filipino languages "cannot be achieved except as part of the collective democratic struggles of other people of color and the vast majority of working citizens oppressed by a class-divided, racialized, and gendered order" (51).



It is this social order that Carlos Bulosan confronted in literature and labor organizing at the beginning of the 20th century. The influential writings of Carlos Bulosan are widely available due in large part to the research of E. San Juan. In keeping with this work, San Juan builds upon Bulosan's analysis in an assessment of the irrational conditions that continue to plague Filipinos in America in our present moment. In the chapter titled, "Revisiting Carlos Bulosan" San Juan requests that the reader not examine Bulosan's writing as a sacred or finished text. Rather, he invites us to resume the unfinished project of Bulosan and the countless "others" who have worked to understand the challenges that confront racialized and subjugated peoples of America in order to prepare for a more humane and just tomorrow. E. San Juan's examination of Bulosan's life and legacy is a dialectical endeavor. The author highlights Bulosan's life experiences that undoubtedly have influenced many. And yet, the author reminds us that individuals do not impose such an influence alone but by generations building on the labor of those who have come before.



The last chapter, "Tracking the Exile's Flight: Mapping a Rendezvous" San Juan reproduces a speech he delivered to alumni of the Philippine Studies Program, a program that enabled university students from around the United States to gain college credit for their summer studies in the Philippines. San Juan maintains that through critical travel experiences or "exposure trips" one can gain a critical standpoint of neoliberal globalization not provided by corporate media or by mainstream academic textbooks. The author argues that these personal experiences can provide critical points of analysis, especially when widened and applied to the conditions that entire groups of people (Filipinos) are situated. Throughout this chapter, San Juan's use of historical materialism provides the reader with an important lens to examine the social contradictions of the Philippine Diaspora.



A common theme throughout Toward Filipino Self-Determination is that Filipinos have passed on a rich legacy dedicated to the projects of democracy, liberation, and self-determination. A new generation of culture workers, scholars, activists, and radical feminists is emerging with their own adapted strategies to bring forth a new society from the vestiges of the old. Throughout his book E. San Juan reminds us that we are all located within arenas of battle, "between humanity and barbarism, between oppressed third world peoples fighting for survival and the rule of a dehumanized global capital" (166). He is astute in his analysis that in this historic struggle new ideas, imaginations, and strategies are needed that enables us to transform the world in which we live. This transformation requires understanding and such understanding can be furnished with theory.

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