Teresa Magbanua Part 10 - As It Had Been

[Apologies for the delay: ‘malfunctioning fire alarms’ is the sort of problem that compounds quickly in the podcast world.]

The final act in Teresa Magbanua’s story. In some ways, it’s a familiar one.

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Sources:

1. Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

2. Caraccilo, Dominic J. (2005). Surviving Bataan And Beyond: Colonel Irvin Alexander's Odyssey As A Japanese Prisoner Of War. Stackpole Books

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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Teresa Magbanua Part 9 - Calm

Teresa Magbanua left the spotlight, pausing her story while the rest of the world goes on.


Sources:

1. Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

2. Revised Administrative Code Of The Philippine Islands Of 1917 - https://archive.org/details/RevisedAdministrativeCodeOfThePhilippineIslandsOf1917/page/n7/mode/2up

3. Seekins, Donald M. (1993), "The First Phase of United States Rule, 1898–1935", in Dolan, Ronald E. (ed.), Philippines: A Country Study (4th ed.), Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter! And our newest show The Mountain's Heart

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

Tumblr: miscellanymedia

Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 8 - The Tragedy

[Editor's Note: Apologies for the delay. It was a long week in the US...]

Things were supposed to go well. Or at least better than they had been. But then tragedy strikes. And a downfall begins.

Sources:

1. Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

2. Foreman, John, “The Philippine Islands: a political, geographical, ethnographical, social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago, embracing the whole period of Spanish rule, with an account of the succeeding American insular government,” New York: 1907, C. Scribner's Sons. - https://archive.org/stream/island00forephilippinerich#page/478/mode/2up

The Text is in the Public Domain

3. Centennial Resource Book. (n.d.). Pascual Magbanua and Teresa Magbanua: WESTERN VISAYAS, Philippines Unsung Heroes. Retrieved November 3, 2020, from http://www.msc.edu.ph/centennial/hero/wv/page7.html

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter! And our newest show The Mountain's Heart

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

Tumblr: miscellanymedia

Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 5 - The Peak

There was no greater prize than Iloilo City. At least for now. At least out of what they could hope for.


Source:

1. Funtecha, Henry (2000). "The Urbanization of the Town of Iloilo, 1865–1900". Selected Papers on Cities in Philippine History. Philippine National Historical Society

2. Foreman, John, “The Philippine Islands: a political, geographical, ethnographical, social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago, embracing the whole period of Spanish rule, with an account of the succeeding American insular government,” New York: 1907, C. Scribner's Sons. - https://archive.org/stream/island00forephilippinerich#page/478/mode/2up The Text is in the Public Domain



Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Sound Effects from Freesound.org
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 2 - Rise

The inevitable war breaks out. And so too does Teresa's call for battle. But it wasn't an easy road for her. Or any woman, really.

Sources:

  1. Guererro, Milagros; Encarnacion, Emmanuel; Villegas, Ramon (1996), "Andres Bonifacio and the 1896 Revolution", Sulyap Kultura, National Commission for Culture and the Arts, 1 (2): 3–12, archived from the original on 2010-11-15, retrieved 2009-07-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20101115193832/http://www.ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/articles-on-c-n-a/article.php?i=5&subcat=1

  2. Lanzona, V. A. (2012). Amazons of the Huk Rebellion: Gender, Sex, and Revolution in the Philippines. Manila: Quezon city Ateneo de Manila University.

  3.  https://cnnphilippines.com/life/culture/2017/06/07/5-filipino-heroines.html


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
----
Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Sound Effects from Freesound.org
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Familiar Concepts, New Contexts

This week, Marcy returns to Tagalog mythology to showcase the daughters of a very familiar figure. Maybe too familiar, but don't worry about for now.


Sources:
1. Jocano, F. "Notes on Philippine Divinities," Philippine Folk Literature: The Myth, Daminan Eugenio, UP Press, 2001. https://www.asj.upd.edu.ph/mediabox/archive/ASJ-06-02-1968/jocano-notes-philippine-divinities.pdf
2. “Bathala's Daughters: The Demigods Mayari, Hanan & Tala.” THE ASWANG PROJECT, 14 May 2018, www.aswangproject.com/bathalas-daughters-demigods-mayari-hanan-tala/.

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Jose Rizal - A Beginning in His Own Way

Welcome to Season 2. Marcy starts it off by looking at a pretty important (and very familiar) historical figure, Jose Rizal and seeks to explain one reason why--in her mind--he was so important.


Sources:
1. Francia, Luis H. “José Rizal: A Man for All Generations.” The Antioch Review, vol. 72, no. 1, 2014, p. 44., doi:10.7723/antiochreview.72.1.0044.
2. Jose Rizal's entry on the Encyclopedia Brittanica.
3. Jackson, Michael. The Politics of Storytelling: Violence, Transgression, and Intersubjectivity. Museum Tusculanum Press, 2006.
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios