Literature Under Occupation:
The Japanese Period in Philippine Letters
How Filipino writers navigated censorship, enforced silence, and covert resistance across four years of Japanese rule — and what they left behind
The World That Ended on December 8, 1941
Philippine literature does not exist in a vacuum. To understand what happened to Filipino writing between 1941 and 1945, you must first understand what shattered around it. The American colonial period had, for all its contradictions, created a vibrant literary ecosystem: English-medium universities, a thriving press in multiple languages, literary journals, the Balagtasan tradition in Tagalog, and a generation of writers schooled in both Western modernism and vernacular form. Then, in a matter of weeks, it was gone.
General Douglas MacArthur declared Manila an open city on December 26, 1941, to spare it from destruction. Japanese forces entered on January 2, 1942. What followed was not merely a military occupation but a total reorganization of Filipino cultural life. The Japanese did not simply govern the Philippines — they attempted to re-imagine it, and literature was central to that project.
Historical note: The Japanese occupation involved extreme violence against civilians, including the Bataan Death March (April 1942), the Manila Massacre (February–March 1945), and widespread atrocities. This literary history must never be separated from that human reality. Writers wrote — and died — within that context.
The Japanese military administration moved quickly to establish control over print, radio, theater, and education. Their approach was ideological as much as administrative: the occupation was framed under the banner of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, a propaganda construct that presented Japanese rule as Asian liberation from Western colonialism. Filipino writers were expected to participate in — and celebrate — that narrative.
The Language Decree: English Banned, Tagalog Mandated
Perhaps no single policy shaped Philippine literary production during the occupation more fundamentally than the Japanese language decree. In 1942, the Japanese military administration banned the use of English in all publications — newspapers, magazines, literary journals, books, and pamphlets. At a stroke, the dominant literary language of the previous four decades was declared illegal.
In its place, the administration promoted three languages: Tagalog (as the Philippine national language), Japanese (as the prestige language of the occupying power), and, to a lesser extent, the regional vernaculars. This created a strange and ironic situation: the very language policy that Filipino nationalists had been fighting for — the elevation of Tagalog — was now imposed by a foreign occupier for its own purposes.
Filipino nationalists had long fought for Tagalog as the national language against American English. Under the Japanese, Tagalog was suddenly official — but its promotion served Japanese imperial ideology, not Filipino self-determination. Writers who embraced Tagalog during this period had to navigate this profound contradiction: was writing in Tagalog resistance or compliance?
For writers trained in English — including many of the finest literary voices of the American period — this decree was professionally devastating. Nick Joaquin, who would later become the greatest Filipino prose writer in English, largely withdrew from publishing during the occupation. Bienvenido Santos was in the United States and remained there until after the war. Carlos Bulosan, working in California, wrote his landmark work America Is in the Heart (1946) partly in response to the war from exile.
For writers already working in Tagalog, however, the decree opened doors. Poets, dramatists, and fiction writers in the vernacular suddenly found their medium not merely permitted but officially encouraged — though always under the shadow of censorship.
The Three-Language Landscape
Japanese
Language of the occupying administration. Promoted in schools and official functions. Very few Filipinos wrote creatively in Japanese, but haiku — a Japanese form — was actively encouraged.
Tagalog / Filipino
Officially promoted as the Philippine national language. Literary production in Tagalog exploded — poetry, drama, fiction, journalism. Both pro-Japanese propaganda and covert resistance used Tagalog.
English
Banned from all publications in 1942. Writers who worked primarily in English faced a stark choice: switch languages, stay silent, or write underground. Many chose silence.
KALIBAPI: The Machinery of Cultural Control
The Japanese military administration did not leave cultural production to chance. On December 8, 1942 — exactly one year after the bombing of Clark Field — they established the KALIBAPI (Kapisanan sa Paglilingkod sa Bagong Pilipinas, or Association for Service to the New Philippines). This organization served as the sole legal political and cultural organization under the occupation, replacing all pre-war political parties, civic groups, and cultural associations.
Under KALIBAPI's cultural wing, writers were expected to produce work that:
Celebrated the Co-Prosperity Sphere
Glorified Japanese-Filipino unity and positioned Japan as the liberator of Asia from Western colonialism.
Condemned the Americans
Depicted American colonialism as exploitation and American promises of liberation as deceit.
Promoted Filipino Traditional Values
Elevated pre-colonial Filipino culture, indigenous customs, and rural virtues as the authentic national identity.
Supported the Puppet Government
Endorsed the Second Philippine Republic under Jose P. Laurel as a legitimate Filipino state.
Publications that did not comply with these directives were suppressed. Writers who actively subverted the propaganda machinery faced imprisonment, torture, and execution. The KALIBAPI also organized literary contests, sponsored theatrical productions, and funded magazines — all as vehicles of ideological control.
In 1943, the Japanese-sponsored government organized a writers' conference that attempted to mobilize Filipino literary talent in support of the occupation. Many writers attended out of fear or pragmatic necessity. A few used the opportunity to deliver work that, while superficially compliant, encoded resistance through allegory, ambiguity, or classical reference that the Japanese censors could not fully decode.
Chronology of the Occupation Period
Bombing of Clark Air Base and Davao. The Pacific War arrives in the Philippines. Writers and editors begin destroying manuscripts and correspondence that could implicate them.
Manila is occupied. The Tribune, Manila Daily Bulletin, and other major newspapers are seized and converted into propaganda organs. English-language literary activity halts almost immediately.
After months of resistance, Filipino and American forces surrender at Bataan. The Bataan Death March kills thousands. Among those who perished or were imprisoned were educators, writers, and intellectuals.
The Japanese administration formally bans English from all publications. Liwayway, Taliba, and other Tagalog magazines continue under strict censorship. The literary landscape is permanently altered.
The Kapisanan sa Paglilingkod sa Bagong Pilipinas becomes the sole legal cultural organization. All writers and cultural workers are expected to register and participate in its programs.
Jose P. Laurel is installed as President of the puppet Second Philippine Republic. Pro-Japanese literary production intensifies. Resistance literature goes deeper underground.
Japanese administrators actively promote haiku writing among Filipinos. A generation of Filipino poets experiments with the form — some sincerely, some as a way to appear compliant while writing obliquely about grief and loss.
One of the finest Filipino short story writers in English is executed by the Japanese for his involvement with the resistance movement — a devastating loss to Philippine literature.
The liberation of Manila results in one of the most destructive urban battles of the Pacific War. Libraries, publishing houses, manuscript archives, and cultural institutions are destroyed. An incalculable literary heritage is lost.
Japan surrenders. Filipino writers face liberation — and a painful reckoning. Who collaborated? Who resisted? What survived? The questions would shape Philippine literary culture for decades.
Literary Forms of the Occupation Period
The occupation did not destroy literary production — it redirected, distorted, and in some cases intensified it. Several forms thrived, were invented, or were adapted under these extraordinary conditions.
Haiku: The Imposed Form
One of the most culturally significant — and politically loaded — developments of the Japanese period was the promotion of haiku among Filipino writers. Japanese administrators actively encouraged haiku writing as a way to build cultural bridges between Japan and the Philippines. Writers' workshops were organized, haiku contests were held, and winning poets were celebrated in official publications.
Many Filipino writers adopted haiku with genuine artistic interest. The form's economy — three lines, a seasonal reference (kigo), a moment of perception — resonated with the Filipino poetic tradition of compressed imagery. But haiku also offered something more practical: in a censored literary environment, the haiku's radical brevity and layered ambiguity made it possible to encode grief, loss, and longing without triggering the censor's pen.
Ulan sa gabi — walang nagtatanong kung saan napunta.
[Rain in the night — / no one asks anymore / where they have gone.]
— Reconstructed example reflecting the period's themes of disappearance and grief
The haiku became, paradoxically, both a tool of cultural colonization and a vehicle of quiet resistance. It is a duality that defines much of what was written in the Philippines between 1941 and 1945.
Tagalog Drama and Zarzuela
Theater flourished under the occupation, partly because it required no paper, no press, and could be performed in plazas and courtyards. The zarzuela — the operetta form that had dominated Philippine theatrical life since the late nineteenth century — was revived and adapted. Japanese-sponsored theatrical productions promoted pro-occupation narratives, but Filipino directors and playwrights often found ways to introduce ambiguous or subversive elements that audiences could read one way and censors another.
The one-act play became particularly important during this period, offering a more concentrated dramatic form that could be rehearsed quickly and performed with minimal resources — vital considerations in a time of scarcity and danger.
Tagalog Fiction: The Nobela Continues
The serialized Tagalog novel (nobela), which had flourished during the American period, continued in magazines like Liwayway — now under Japanese censorship. Writers working in this form developed sophisticated strategies for encoding criticism of the occupation through historical allegory, displaced settings, and character types that readers recognized as representing contemporary realities.
Poetry: Resistance in Verse
Tagalog and vernacular poetry — including the Balagtasan tradition — continued throughout the occupation. Public Balagtasan performances continued in some areas, though with topics carefully chosen to avoid obvious political danger. Poets working in the resistance movement, however, wrote in an entirely different register: urgent, coded, angry, and circulated through underground networks.
Underground Literature
Some of the most significant literary production of the period never appeared in print — or appeared only in mimeographed sheets, handwritten notes, and whispered oral transmission. The guerrilla resistance movement had its own literature: manifestos, poetry, songs, and narratives of resistance that circulated in the mountains of Luzon, the jungles of Mindanao, and the underground networks of occupied Manila. This literature has been the most difficult for scholars to recover.
Haiku
Japanese-promoted three-line form. Adopted by Filipinos as both compliance and coded resistance. Ambiguity was its greatest literary and survival tool.
Zarzuela / Drama
Musical drama revived during the occupation. Theater survived where print was banned. Pro-Japanese productions coexisted with subtly subversive staging.
Nobela
Serialized Tagalog novels in censored magazines. Writers used historical allegory and displaced narrative to critique the occupation indirectly.
Resistance Poetry
Circulated in handwritten or mimeographed form through guerrilla networks. Urgent, uncompromising, and rarely recovered by literary historians.
Propaganda Literature
Officially sanctioned writing in KALIBAPI publications and occupied newspapers. Some writers participated willingly; many did so under coercion or for survival.
Oral Tradition
When writing became dangerous, oral forms — songs, riddles, spoken narratives — carried cultural memory and resistance messages safely beyond the censor's reach.
Publications: The Press Under Occupation
The pre-war Philippine press was one of the liveliest in Southeast Asia — a multilingual ecosystem of newspapers, literary magazines, and political journals in English, Spanish, Tagalog, and regional vernaculars. The Japanese occupation systematically dismantled this ecosystem and replaced it with a controlled propaganda press. Understanding which publications survived, and under what conditions, is essential for understanding wartime literary production.
1941–1945
Liwayway
The most important and widely-read Tagalog weekly magazine. Established in 1922, Liwayway continued publishing throughout the occupation under Japanese censorship. It remained the primary venue for serialized Tagalog fiction, poetry, and cultural commentary. Writers who wanted to reach a mass Tagalog-reading audience had to publish here — under the censor's gaze. Liwayway's survival through the occupation and its postwar continuity make it the single most important documentary record of wartime Tagalog literary production.
1942–1945
Tribune (Occupied Version)
The pre-war English-language Tribune was seized by the Japanese and converted into a propaganda organ. Ironically, it was the underground version of the Tribune — mimeographed sheets circulated by the resistance — that Manuel Arguilla worked on before his arrest and execution. The contrast between the official Tribune and the underground Tribune encapsulates the period's fundamental literary tension.
1942–1945
Taliba
A Tagalog daily that continued under Japanese occupation and censorship. Served as a vehicle for both propaganda and cautiously encoded cultural writing. Its literary pages published some of the period's most significant Tagalog poetry — work that requires careful contextual reading to assess the degree of genuine expression versus enforced compliance.
1943–1944
Bagong Pilipina
A women's magazine that continued under Japanese sponsorship. Published fiction, poetry, and practical content aimed at Filipino women. Like all occupation-era publications, it operated under the KALIBAPI framework — but its pages also contain examples of writing that used domestic and sentimental subject matter as cover for more subversive emotional content.
1942–1945
KALIBAPI Official Publications
Various pamphlets, bulletins, and literary anthologies produced directly under KALIBAPI sponsorship. These are the clearest examples of pro-Japanese propaganda literature and also, paradoxically, sometimes the venue for the most artistically sophisticated writing of the period — because talented writers were actively recruited to give the propaganda cultural credibility.
1942–1945
Underground / Guerrilla Publications
Handwritten, mimeographed, or whispered — guerrilla literature circulated outside the official press entirely. Songs, poems, manifestos, and narratives of resistance that were never formally published and are largely lost. Scholars like Resil Mojares and Epifanio San Juan Jr. have worked to recover fragments of this tradition, but the vast majority remains inaccessible or destroyed.
Major Themes in the Literature of Occupation
Across languages, forms, and individual choices, certain themes recur throughout the literature of the Japanese period. These themes were shaped by the historical conditions — but they also transcended them, touching on questions of human experience that remain vital for any reader.
Survival and Moral Compromise
The central existential question of the period: how far will you go to survive? Writing about compromise — in language that itself had to survive censorship — produced some of the most emotionally complex work of the era.
Heroism and Sacrifice
Both sides of the propaganda war claimed heroism. Pro-Japanese literature celebrated Filipino-Japanese solidarity; resistance literature celebrated guerrilla fighters and martyrs like Arguilla. The same vocabulary served opposite ends.
Loss, Grief, and Disappearance
Thousands of Filipinos were killed, imprisoned, or disappeared under the Kempeitai. Literature — especially haiku and lyric poetry — became the primary space to mourn those whose deaths could not be publicly named.
Filipino Identity Under Pressure
The Japanese demanded that Filipinos re-identify as part of Asian civilization rather than a Westernized colonial subject. Writers struggled with this demand — some found genuine resonance, many did not, and the tension produced compelling literary exploration of what being Filipino actually meant.
Nature as Refuge and Code
The haiku's required seasonal reference (kigo) encouraged writers to turn to nature imagery as both poetic subject and coded language. A poem about rice fields, rain, or birds could carry meanings that had nothing to do with agriculture.
Memory and the Past
When the present was too dangerous to write about directly, writers turned to history — pre-colonial mythology, the Spanish period, the Revolution of 1896 — as a way of speaking about the present without naming it.
Writing in the Dark: Resistance Literature
The most important — and least recoverable — literature of the Japanese period is the writing that was never meant to be published. Guerrilla networks across the Philippine archipelago produced a literature of survival: songs sung in the mountains of Luzon, poems scratched onto the walls of Fort Santiago cells, oral narratives passed from fighter to fighter through the jungles of Mindanao and Leyte.
What distinguished resistance literature from mere anti-Japanese sentiment was its formal seriousness. The best resistance writers understood that the power of their work depended not only on what they said but on how they said it. A resistance poem that was only angry was only propaganda — a resistance poem that was also beautiful was indestructible.
Strategies of Covert Expression
Writers working under censorship developed recognizable strategies for encoding resistance into ostensibly compliant work:
Historical displacement: Setting a story or poem in the Spanish period allowed a writer to critique colonialism without naming Japan — a thin but sometimes effective disguise.
Classical allusion: References to Balagtas's Florante at Laura — itself a critique of colonial oppression dressed as romance — carried immediate resonance for Filipino readers who understood the subtext.
Lyric indirection: A poem about a dead tree, a flooded field, or a bird that will not sing could carry any number of meanings that official censors, often unfamiliar with Filipino literary tradition, might miss.
Oral transmission: When writing was too dangerous, speech was safer. Poets memorized and recited work that was never committed to paper — and much of it was lost when those poets died.
The Censor's Pen: What Could Not Be Said
This simulation shows what a resistance poem might have looked like — first as it appeared in official publication (with key words censored or replaced), then with its true meaning revealed. Click the button to lift the censor's black marks.
As Published in Official Press:
Official translation submitted to censors:
Legacy: What the Japanese Period Left Behind
When the smoke cleared from the Battle of Manila in March 1945, Philippine literature found itself in a condition that was simultaneously impoverished and newly charged. Libraries had burned. Manuscripts had been destroyed. Manuel Arguilla was dead. Fort Santiago had consumed hundreds of intellectuals whose work died with them.
And yet the occupation period left a legacy that cannot be reduced to loss alone.
The Consolidation of Tagalog as Literary Language
Paradoxically, the Japanese ban on English accelerated the development of Tagalog as a vehicle for serious literary production. Writers who had previously written primarily or exclusively in English were forced to develop — or at least engage with — Tagalog. This did not resolve the language question in Philippine literature, but it deepened the literary tradition in Tagalog in ways that the American period had not achieved.
The Ethical Wound
The occupation period left a lasting ethical wound on Philippine literary culture. The question of who collaborated and who resisted — and under what circumstances — haunted the literary community for decades after the war. Writers who had published under KALIBAPI sponsorship faced scrutiny. The line between survival and complicity was often impossible to draw clearly, and the literary community's reckoning with this question shaped debates about literary ethics and political responsibility well into the postwar period.
The Birth of Protest Literature
The experience of writing under censorship and oppression produced a generation of writers who had learned — through necessity — the techniques of indirection, allegory, and coded expression. These techniques would prove invaluable in the postwar period, particularly during the Marcos dictatorship (1972–1986), when Filipino writers once again faced political censorship. The Japanese period was, in a sense, the training ground for protest literature.
The Canon Question
The destruction of the Battle of Manila — and the deliberate suppression of resistance writing — means that the literary canon of the Japanese period is necessarily incomplete. What survives is disproportionately the work that was officially published and preserved: pro-Japanese propaganda, cautiously encoded Tagalog fiction, and haiku written for official contests. The more politically urgent work — the underground poetry, the resistance songs, the prison wall inscriptions — is largely lost. Any honest account of this period must acknowledge what has not survived.
When the Battle of Manila destroyed the historic walled city of Intramuros in February–March 1945, it also destroyed the single largest concentration of Philippine historical and literary archives — centuries of manuscripts, church records, and colonial-era publications. Scholars estimate that the destruction of the National Library and its collections represents an irreplaceable loss to Philippine literary and cultural history. What we know about the Japanese period is a fraction of what existed.
KALIBAPI
Kapisanan sa Paglilingkod sa Bagong Pilipinas (Association for Service to the New Philippines). The sole legal political and cultural organization under Japanese occupation, established December 8, 1942.
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
Japanese imperial propaganda concept that framed Japanese expansion as Asian liberation from Western colonialism. Filipino writers were expected to celebrate this narrative in their work.
Kempeitai
The Japanese military police, feared for their brutal interrogation methods. Responsible for the arrest, torture, and execution of Filipino resistance members including Manuel Arguilla.
Haiku
Japanese three-line poem with a 5-7-5 syllable structure and a seasonal reference (kigo). Actively promoted among Filipino writers by the occupation administration as a cultural bridge.
Kigo
The seasonal reference required in traditional haiku. In Filipino haiku of the occupation period, kigo — references to rain, harvest, birds — often served double duty as coded metaphors for political realities.
Zarzuela
Philippine musical drama, a form derived from Spanish operetta that had been the dominant theatrical form since the nineteenth century. Revived and adapted under the occupation as a vehicle for both propaganda and subtle resistance.
Second Philippine Republic
The Japanese-sponsored Philippine government headed by President Jose P. Laurel (1943–1945). A puppet state whose official cultural programs framed the context for all legal literary production.
Fort Santiago
A colonial-era fortress in Intramuros, Manila, used by the Japanese Kempeitai as a prison and torture site. Thousands of Filipinos — including writers and intellectuals — were held, tortured, and executed there.
Nobela
Serialized Tagalog novel, published in installments in magazines like Liwayway. The primary vehicle for Tagalog popular fiction during the American period, it continued under Japanese censorship.
Liwayway
The most widely-read Tagalog weekly magazine, founded 1922. Continued publishing throughout the occupation under censorship. The primary literary venue for Tagalog-language writers during the Japanese period.
Bataan Death March
The forced transfer of approximately 76,000 Filipino and American prisoners of war after the fall of Bataan (April 1942). Thousands died of exhaustion, violence, and disease. A defining atrocity of the occupation.
Thomasites
American teachers who arrived in 1901 to establish English-medium education. Referenced here as the architects of the English literary culture that the Japanese decree dismantled in 1942.
Experience what it meant to write creatively under censorship by attempting to encode a forbidden message inside an apparently innocent poem.
- Step 1 — Choose a forbidden statement (these represent what could not be written openly under the occupation): "The Japanese occupation is unjust." / "We want freedom." / "We remember our martyrs." / "This silence is forced."
- Step 2 — Write a four-line poem using only imagery from nature (water, trees, birds, seasons, weather, rice, soil) that somehow carries the emotional meaning of your forbidden statement — without ever stating it. The poem must appear completely innocent.
- Step 3 — Exchange poems with a classmate. Can they guess what forbidden statement you encoded? Can you decode theirs?
- Step 4 — Class discussion: How difficult was it to encode meaning without stating it? What does this tell us about the literary strategies Filipino writers developed under occupation? What is lost when writers cannot speak directly?
- Step 5 — Reflection writing: "If you were a Filipino writer in 1943, would you write under censorship, write underground, or stay silent? Explain your choice in 200 words."
A structured debate and moral reasoning exercise using the ethical dilemmas faced by Filipino writers under occupation.
- Setup: Present students with three fictional Filipino writer profiles based on composite real experiences: (A) A Tagalog poet who published pro-Japanese work in official magazines to protect his family; (B) A journalist who wrote propaganda but secretly passed information to the guerrillas; (C) A writer who went completely silent for four years and published nothing.
- Divide the class into three groups — Prosecution, Defense, and Judges — for each case.
- Research and prepare arguments for 20 minutes using provided source materials on the occupation's actual conditions of censorship, threat, and coercion.
- Hold the tribunal: Each "case" gets 10 minutes — prosecution argues complicity, defense argues coercion or conscience, judges deliberate and announce a verdict with reasoning.
- Post-tribunal discussion: Is it fair to judge wartime moral choices from peacetime comfort? What does literature owe to political resistance? Can propaganda be art?
Engage directly with the haiku form that Filipino writers both adopted and subverted during the Japanese period.
- Study the haiku form: Three lines. Traditional syllable structure: 5-7-5 (in Japanese; in Filipino adaptations, the exact count was often approximate). A seasonal or natural image (kigo). A moment of perception or surprise in the final line.
- Write Haiku A: A straightforward haiku about Philippine nature in the present — rice fields, rain, a carabao, a mango tree. Focus on beauty and precision of image.
- Write Haiku B: Using the same natural imagery from Haiku A, write a second haiku that carries a hidden second meaning — something about loss, freedom, grief, or resistance. The surface must remain completely innocent.
- Share and compare: Read both haiku to the class. Discuss: how does adding a second layer of meaning change the poem? Does it make it more or less beautiful? More or less honest?
- Final reflection: "The haiku was a form imposed by an occupying power on Filipino writers. How is it possible for a form to be both a tool of control and a vehicle of freedom at the same time?"
Study the work of the war's most important literary martyr. Understanding Arguilla's fiction illuminates what Filipino literature lost when he was executed.
- Read the story in full — it is short enough for a single class period. Focus on the sensory detail (the dusty road, the smell of the countryside, the sound of the bullcart), the characterization of the narrator's mother, and the final image.
- Annotation exercise: Mark every moment where the story uses sensory detail to anchor the reader in the Ilocano rural world. What does this specificity of place accomplish? Why does it matter that this story is so rooted in a very particular Philippine landscape?
- Discuss: Arguilla was executed for resistance activity — but this story is about a bride coming home for the first time, not politics. How does a story apparently unrelated to politics become a political act when its author dies for political resistance?
- Writing prompt: Imagine you are a Filipino reader who has just learned of Arguilla's execution. You are re-reading this story. Write 200 words about how the story changes — or does not change — after you know how its author died.
A research project that confronts students directly with the problem of literary loss and historical silence.
- Framing: Present the following facts — the National Library was destroyed in 1945; an unknown number of writers were killed or imprisoned; the underground resistance produced literature that was never formally published. Ask: How do we study a literature that is mostly lost?
- Research task: Each student or pair researches one of the following: (A) The destruction of Intramuros and its archives; (B) The biography of Manuel Arguilla; (C) Amado V. Hernandez's wartime activities; (D) The KALIBAPI's literary programs; (E) Filipino haiku from the occupation period.
- Creative recovery: Based on research, each student writes one of the following — a poem that Arguilla might have written in Fort Santiago; a haiku that a Filipino writer submitted to an official contest while secretly meaning something else; a journal entry from a Filipino writer deciding whether to publish under KALIBAPI sponsorship.
- Class anthology: Compile the creative recovery pieces into a "Recovered Voices" anthology with each piece labeled with a brief historical note explaining its context.
- Final discussion: "What is the difference between historical imagination and historical fabrication? Is it ethical to write 'in the voice' of writers who actually lived? What responsibilities does this impose on us?"
A comparative exercise that uses the contrast between the two colonial periods to deepen understanding of both.
- Create a comparison chart across the following categories for both the American Period (1898–1941) and the Japanese Period (1941–1945): dominant language of literary production; primary literary forms; main publishing venues; relationship between literature and political power; major literary figures; primary literary themes.
- Discussion questions: In which period was Filipino literary production more constrained? In which period was it more politically urgent? Is there a relationship between constraint and urgency?
- Essay prompt: "Both the American and Japanese colonial administrations used literature as a tool of ideological control. Compare the methods they used and evaluate which was more effective — and more damaging to Filipino literary culture." (Minimum 500 words, with specific textual examples.)
- Extension: Read the Balagtasan tradition (American period) alongside the haiku tradition (Japanese period) as two different responses to colonial cultural pressure. How do the forms themselves encode different relationships to power?
Test Your Knowledge
Eight questions on the Japanese Period in Philippine Literature. Answer carefully — these are the kinds of questions that matter.
1. When did Japanese forces formally enter and occupy Manila?
2. What does KALIBAPI stand for?
3. Which Filipino writer was executed by the Japanese Kempeitai for resistance activities in 1944?
4. Why did the Japanese occupation authorities promote the haiku form among Filipino writers?
5. What was the primary Tagalog literary magazine that continued publishing throughout the Japanese occupation?
6. What was the most significant physical loss to Philippine literary and cultural heritage during the Japanese period?
7. Carlos Bulosan wrote "America Is in the Heart" during the war years. Where was he when he wrote it?
8. Which literary strategy did Filipino writers use to encode resistance into apparently compliant published work?
References & Further Reading
- Agoncillo, T. A. (1965). The Fateful Years: Japan's Adventure in the Philippines, 1941–45. (2 vols.) R.P. Garcia Publishing.
- Arguilla, M. (1940). How My Brother Leon Brought Home a Wife and Other Stories. Bureau of Printing.
- Bulosan, C. (1946). America Is in the Heart: A Personal History. Harcourt, Brace and Company.
- Casper, L. (1966). The Wounded Diamond: Studies in Modern Philippine Literature. Bookmark.
- Constantino, R. (1975). The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Tala Publishing.
- Cruz, I. D. (Ed.). (1984). Philippine Literature: A History and Anthology. Bookmark.
- Galdon, J. A. (Ed.). (1979). Philippine Fiction: Essays from Philippine Studies. Ateneo de Manila University Press.
- Hernandez, A. V. (1940s–1960s). Selected Poems and Prose. Collected editions, University of the Philippines Press.
- Lumbera, B., & Lumbera, C. N. (1997). Philippine Literature: A History and Anthology. Revised ed. Anvil Publishing.
- Mojares, R. B. (1983). Origins and Rise of the Filipino Novel. University of the Philippines Press.
- San Juan, E. Jr. (1984). Toward a People's Literature: Essays in the Dialectics of Praxis and Contradiction in Philippine Writing. University of the Philippines Press.
- Tiongson, N. G. (Ed.). (1994). CCP Encyclopedia of Philippine Art, Vol. IX: Philippine Literature. Cultural Center of the Philippines.
- Yabes, L. Y. (1954). Philippine Literature in English, 1898–1948. University of the Philippines.
- Zafra, N. (Ed.). (1967). Readings in Philippine History. Bookmark.
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