We have a balikbayan box that will leave LA in the third
week of Jan 2010 for Manila and if any of the titles below 
are of interest, please place your order by the 10th of Jan
2010 so that we can ship accordingly. You can pay our
office in Makati in pesos based on the rate of exchange 
on the date that you placed your order. 50% deposit is
required upon shipment and the balance due upon
delivery in February 2010. Hope to hear from you all.
Thanks.

Linda

---

Philippine Expressions Bookshop

The Mail Order Bookshop dedicated to

Filipino Americans in search of their roots.

  

2114 Trudie Drive

Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275-2006, USA

Tel and Fax (310) 514-9139    

----



"Do not go where the path may lead, go

instead where there is no path and leave a trail." -  Ralph Waldo

Emerson.



We have blazed the trail in promoting Philippine  books in America.

2009 marks our 25th year of  service to the Filipino American community.

Mabuhay. 

----

--- On Tue, 12/15/09, Linda Nietes <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Linda Nietes <[email protected]>
Subject: New Titles by Filipino Americans  12/15/09
To: "linda nietes" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, December 15, 2009, 6:18 PM

Dear Bibliophiles, 
The following new titles by Filipino American scholars are broughtto you by 
your Community Bookseller. If you do not wish to receivefurther announcements 
of this nature, please contact us and wewill remove your name from our mailing 
list. We look forward to be of further service.
Linda Nietes   

America’s
 ExpertsRace and the Fictions of
 Sociology
Cynthia H. Tolentino
 
$22.50 paper
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5111-5$67.50 cloth
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5110-8


 Reveals the impact of sociology on ethnic literature and the politics of 
raceDuring World War II, the rising visibility of anticolonial and antiracist 
movements exposed contradictions
 between the U.S. democratic mission in Europe and racist practices against 
people of color at home.
 Yet the professional success stories of people of color gave ideological 
support to the notion that liberal antiracism was spreading within the United 
States.
Challenging conventional accounts of U.S. ethnic literature rooted in 1960s and 
1970s social movements, Cynthia H. Tolentino sees this literary work as 
emerging from a political climate in which arguments about the integration of 
racial minorities and the moral legitimacy of U.S. international leadership are 
intertwined. Probing how sociologists including Robert E. Park, Gunnar Myrdal, 
and Emory Bogardus situated Asian Americans, Filipinos, and African Americans 
as model citizens and problems, Tolentino contends that such studies served as 
a staging ground for writers of color to become narrators of racial identity, 
citizenship, and U.S. neocolonialism.
Tracing the literary engagements of Richard Wright, Carlos Bulosan, and Jade 
Snow Wong with the sociology of
 race, Tolentino assesses
 their works as critical expressions of class negotiation on the global stage 
and illuminates the significance of U.S. ethnic literature.Cynthia H. 
Tolentino is assistant professor of English at the University of Oregon.200 
pages | 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 | 2009TABLE OF CONTENTSIntroduction: Between Subjects and 
Objects1. Sociological Interests, Racial Reform: Richard Wright’s Intellectual 
of Color2. Americanization as Black Professionalization: Gunnar Myrdal’s An 
American Dilemma3. Training for the American Century: Professional Filipinos in 
Carlos Bulosan’s America Is in the Heart4. Not Black, Not Coolies: 
Pathologization, Asian American Citizenship, and Jade Snow Wong’s Fifth Chinese 
DaughterCoda: The Tutelary Byways
 of Global
 UpliftAcknowledgments
Notes
Index

The Decolonized EyeFilipino American Art and Performance
Sarita Echavez See  
 
 

$25.00 paper
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5319-5$75.00 cloth
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5318-8


 Filipino American artists map and contest the United States’ amnesia about its 
colonization of the PhilippinesFrom the late 1980s to the present, artists of 
Filipino descent in the United States have produced a challenging and creative 
movement. In The Decolonized Eye, Sarita Echavez See shows how these artists 
have engaged with the complex aftermath of U.S. colonialism in the Philippines.
Focusing on artists working in New York and California, See examines the
 overlapping artistic and aesthetic practices and concerns of filmmaker Angel 
Shaw, painter Manuel Ocampo, installation artist Paul Pfeiffer, comedian Rex 
Navarrete, performance artist Nicky Paraiso, and sculptor Reanne Estrada to 
explain the reasons for their strangely shadowy presence in American culture 
and scholarship. Offering an interpretation of their creations that accounts 
for their queer, decolonizing strategies of camp, mimesis, and humor, See 
reveals the conditions of possibility that constitute this contemporary archive.
By analyzing art, performance, and visual culture, The Decolonized 
Eye illuminates the unexpected consequences of America’s amnesia over its 
imperial history.
Sarita Echavez See is associate professor of Asian/Pacific Islander American 
studies at the University of Michigan.232 pages | 25 b&w illustrations, 13 
color plates | 5 1/2 x
 8 1/2 |
 2009TABLE OF CONTENTSAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Foreign in a Domestic 
SensePart I. Staging the Sublime
1. An Open Wound: Angel Shaw and Manuel Ocampo
2. A Queer Horizon: Paul Pfeiffer’s Disintegrating Figure StudiesPart II. 
Pilipinos Are Punny, Freud Is Filipino
3. Why Filipinos Make Pun(s) of One Another: The Sikolohiya/Psychology of Rex 
Navarrete’s Stand-up Comedy
4. “He will not always say what you would have him say”: Loss and Aural 
(Be)Longing in Nicky Paraiso’s House/BoyConclusion: Reanne Estrada, Identity, 
and the Politics of AbstractionNotes 
Bibliography
Index
Suspended
 ApocalypseWhite Supremacy, Genocide, and the Filipino Condition
Dylan Rodríguez

$25.00 paper
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5350-8$75.00 cloth
ISBN: 978-0-8166-5349-2


 Examines the
 Filipino American as a product of conquest, white supremacy, and racial empire
Suspended Apocalypse is a rich and provocative meditation on the emergence of 
the Filipino American as a subject of history. Culling from historical, 
popular, and ethnographic archives, Dylan Rodríguez provides a sophisticated 
analysis of the Filipino presence in the American imaginary. Radically 
critiquing current conceptions of Filipino American identity, community, and 
history, he puts forth a genealogy of Filipino genocide, rooted in the early 
twentieth-century military, political, and cultural subjugation of the 
Philippines by the United States.Suspended Apocalypse critically addresses what 
Rodríguez calls “Filipino American communion,” interrogating redemptive and 
romantic notions of Filipino migration and settlement in the United States in 
relation to larger
 histories of race, colonial conquest, and white supremacy. Contemporary 
popular and scholarly discussions of the Filipino American are, he asserts, 
inseparable from their origins in the violent racist regimes of the United 
States and its historical successor, liberal multiculturalism.
Rodríguez deftly contrasts the colonization of the Philippines with present-day 
disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and Mount Pinatubo to show how the global 
subjection of Philippine, black, and indigenous peoples create a linked history 
of genocide. But in these juxtapositions, Rodríguez finds moments and spaces of 
radical opportunity. Engaging the violence and disruption of the Filipino 
condition sets the stage, he argues, for the possibility of a transformation of 
the political lens through which contemporary empire might be analyzed, 
understood, and perhaps even overcome.
Dylan Rodríguez is associate
 professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Riverside. He is 
the author of Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U.S. 
Prison Regime(Minnesota, 2006).256 pages | 5 b&w illustrations | 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 
| December 2009



American TropicsArticulating Filipino AmericaAllan Punzalan Isaac


$22.50 Paper 
ISBN: 0-8166-4274-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4274-8$60.00 Cloth 
ISBN: 0-8166-4273-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4273-1
 Winner of the Association for Asian American Studies' 2006 Book Award in the 
Cultural Studies
How America’s image of the Philippines reflects the U.S. inability to see its 
own imperialism.
In 1997, when the New York
 Times described Filipino American serial killer Andrew Cunanan as appearing 
“to be everywhere and nowhere,” Allan Punzalan Isaac recognized confusion about 
the Filipino presence in the United States, symptomatic of American 
imperialism’s invisibility to itself. In American Tropics, Isaac explores 
American fantasies about the Philippines and other “unincorporated” parts of 
the U.S. nation that obscure the contradictions of a democratic country 
possessing colonies.
Isaac boldly examines the American empire’s images of the Philippines in 
turn-of-the-century legal debates over Puerto Rico, Progressive-era popular 
literature set in Latin American borderlands, and midcentury Hollywood cinema 
staged in Hawai‘i and the Pacific islands. Isaac scrutinizes media coverage of 
the Cunanan case, Boy Scout adventure novels, and Hollywood films such as The 
Real Glory (1939) and Blue
 Hawaii (1961) to argue that territorial sites of occupation are an important 
part of American identity. American Tropics further reveals the imperial 
imagination’s role in shaping national meaning in novels such as Carlos 
Bulosan’s America Is in the Heart (1946) and Jessica 
Hagedorn’s Dogeaters (1990), Filipino American novels forced to articulate the 
empire’s enfolded but disavowed borders.
Tracing the American empire from the beginning of the twentieth century to 
Philippine liberation and the U.S. civil rights movement, American Tropics lays 
bare Filipino Americans’ unique form of belonging marked indelibly by 
imperialism and at odds with U.S. racial politics and culture.
“Isaac is bold in his examination of America’s images of the Philippines and 
Filipinos as depicted in law, media coverage, literature, and Hollywood
 cinema.” —Colonial Latin American Historical Review
“Isaac commands the reader’s attention through his thoughtful, consistent, and 
serious critique of hypocrisies and aporiae within empire, as well as by his 
smart and engaging narrative. American Tropics is a noteworthy and important 
text, one that will compel scholars to redraw the cartographies of 
Filipino/American imaginaries.” —Journal of American Ethnic History
Allan Punzalan Isaac is assistant professor of English at Wesleyan 
University.256 pages | 5 7⁄8 x 9 | 2006
Critical American Studies SeriesTABLE OF CONTENTSAcknowledgments
Introduction
1. American
 TropicsPart I. An Imperial Grammar
2.
 Disappearing Clauses: Reconstituting America in the Unincorporated Territories
3. Moral Sentences: Boy Scouts and Novel Encounters with Empire
4. Imperial Romance: Framing Manifest Destiny in the PacificPart II. Toward an 
American Postcolonial Syntax
5. Reconstituting American Subjects: Proximate Masculinities
6. Reconstituting American Predicates: Troping the American Tour d’HorisonCoda
Notes
Index
Model-Minority ImperialismVictor Bascara


$22.50 Paper 
ISBN: 0-8166-4512-4
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4512-1$58.50 Cloth 
ISBN: 0-8166-4511-6
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4511-4
 Understanding the legacy of U.S. imperialism through Asian American culture.At 
the beginning of the twentieth century, soon after the conclusion of the 
Spanish-American War, the United States was an imperialistic nation, 
maintaining (often with the assistance of military force) a far-flung and 
growing empire.
 After a long period of collective national amnesia regarding American 
colonialism, in the Philippines and elsewhere, scholars have resurrected the 
power of “empire” as a way of revealing American history and culture. 
Focusing on the terms of Asian American assimilation and the rise of the 
model-minority myth, Victor Bascara examines the resurgence of empire as a tool 
for acknowledging—and understanding—the legacy of American 
imperialism.Model-Minority Imperialism links geopolitical dramas of 
twentieth-century empire building with domestic controversies of U.S. racial 
order by examining the cultural politics of Asian Americans as they are 
revealed in fiction, film, and theatrical productions. Tracing U.S. economic 
and political hegemony back to the beginning of the twentieth century through 
works by Jessica Hagedorn, R. Zamora Linmark, and Sui Sin Far; discourses of 
race, economics, and empire found in
 the speeches of William McKinley and William Jennings Bryan; as well as L. 
Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and other texts, Bascara’s innovative 
readings uncover the repressed story of U.S. imperialism and unearth the demand 
that the present empire reckon with its past.
Bascara deploys the analytical approaches of both postcolonial studies and 
Asian American studies, two fields that developed in parallel but have only 
begun to converge, to reveal how the vocabulary of empire reasserted itself 
through some of the very people who inspired the U.S imperialist 
mission.“Model-Minority Imperialism is a complex, stimulating, and rich text 
with a multitude of intriguing cases for scholars of Asian American studies, 
ethnic studies, and American and global studies more generally.” —MELUS
Victor Bascara is assistant professor of English
 and Asian American studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.232 pages | 
5 7⁄8 x 9 | 2006TABLE OF CONTENTSPreface
Introduction: We Are Here Because You Were There1. Unburdening Empire: The 
Cultural Politics of Asian American Difference
2. An Ever-Emergent Empire: The Discourse of American Exceptionalism
3. “The American Earth Was Like a Huge Heart”: Old Dreams and the New 
Imperialism
4. Uplifting Race, Reconstructing Empire
5. “Everybody Wants To Be Farrah”: Absurd Histories and Historical Absurdities 
Epilogue: Pay Any Price, Bear Any BurdenNotes Migrants for
 Export

How the Philippine State Brokers Labor to the World 

Robyn Magalit Rodriguez
$22.50 paper 
ISBN 978-0-8166-6528-0
$67.50 cloth 
ISBN 978-0-8166-6527-3
 How the Philippines transformed itself into the world’s leading labor 
brokerage state
Migrant workers from the Philippines are ubiquitous to global capitalism, with 
nearly 10 percent of the population employed in almost two hundred countries. 
In a visit to the
 United States in 2003, Philippine president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo even 
referred to herself as not only the head of state but also “the
 CEO of a global Philippine enterprise of eight million Filipinos who live and 
work abroad.”Robyn Magalit Rodriguez investigates how and why the Philippine 
government transformed itself into what she calls a labor brokerage state, 
which actively prepares, mobilizes, and regulates its citizens for migrant work 
abroad. Filipino men and women fill a range of jobs around the globe, including 
domestic work, construction, and engineering, and they have even worked in the 
Middle East to support U.S. military operations. At the same time, the state 
redefines nationalism to normalize its citizens to migration while fostering 
their ties to the Philippines. Those who leave the country to work and send 
their wages to their families at home are treated as new national heroes.
Drawing on ethnographic research of the Philippine government’s migration 
bureaucracy, interviews, and archival work, Rodriguez presents a new analysis 
of neoliberal
 globalization and its consequences for nation-state formation.

Robyn Magalit Rodriguez is assistant professor of sociology at Rutgers 
University.

208 pages | 24 b&w photos | 2 tables | March 2010
 ---

Philippine Expressions Bookshop

The Mail Order Bookshop dedicated to

Filipino Americans in search of their roots.

  

2114 Trudie Drive

Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275-2006, USA

Tel and Fax (310) 514-9139    

----



"Do not go where the path may lead, go

instead where there is no path and leave a trail." -  Ralph Waldo

Emerson.



We have blazed the trail in promoting Philippine  books in America.

2009 marks our 25th year of  service to the Filipino American community.

Mabuhay. 

----

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