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Remembering/rethinking EDSA.

Material type: TextTextPublisher: Mandaluyong City: Anvil Publishing, 2016Edition: edited by JPaul S. Manzanilla and Caroline S. HauDescription: 457 pages.: part. ill.; 24cmSubject(s): | DDC classification: FIL 959.9056 R386 2016 Summary: In the thirty years since the "People's Power Revolution" of 1986. there is still no consensus on what EDSA was and what it means. Prominent participants and members of the Church, the military, the business community, the middle classes, and even the U.S. State Department have claimed credit for the February event. This anthology gathers together the reminiscences and reflections of activists, academics, and artists, focusing not only on those who took part in the event, but also on those who came of age in the wake of EDSA. The act of remembering becomes an occasion for rethinking and reassessing the contested legacy of EDSA and its continuing implications and for present and future generations of Filipinos.
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Grade School Learning Resource Center
Filipiniana Collection
Non-fiction FIL 959.9056 R386 2016 (Browse shelf) 1 Available GS18765
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FIL 959.9056 K124 2008 A Political journey / FIL 959.9056 M325 2009 Edjop : a child of the storm / FIL 959.9056 M745 2010 Mondo Marcos : FIL 959.9056 R386 2016 Remembering/rethinking EDSA. FIL 959.959911 D3708 2006 The Ilocos heritage/ Visitacion R. de la Torre. FIL 959.959911 D3708 2006 The Ilocos heritage/ Visitacion R. de la Torre. FIL 959.9931 L457 1998 Mga dakilang lider na Pilipino /

In the thirty years since the "People's Power Revolution" of 1986. there is still no consensus on what EDSA was and what it means. Prominent participants and members of the Church, the military, the business community, the middle classes, and even the U.S. State Department have claimed credit for the February event. This anthology gathers together the reminiscences and reflections of activists, academics, and artists, focusing not only on those who took part in the event, but also on those who came of age in the wake of EDSA. The act of remembering becomes an occasion for rethinking and reassessing the contested legacy of EDSA and its continuing implications and for present and future generations of Filipinos.

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