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Elements of Fiction Guide CLAY by JUAN T. GATBONTON (Post-War)
Philippines (1951)
Characters
Clayton but everybody called him Clay. Clay was
one of the army mechanics. He talked too fast that
many natives could not understand him.
Ms. Rosete was a teacher at the high school
Point of View
First person point of view stands out as a character
and refers to himself or herself, using “I”
Setting/Local color
1951 — The granting of political independence did
not in fact end American domination. On the
contrary, many features of colonialism remain even
today.
The army camp was on the east side of the main
street; the gray, two-story building of concrete and
galvanized iron that was the army barracks
Candaba’s main street. The Americans had built a
bridge and gouged out a new road on the left bank
of the river
The period from 1946 — 1960 was an era of effective
American control of the Philippine economy,
political life and military affairs.
¢ The teenager introduced the American friend
Clay to Ms. Rosete his crush. After a while,
Clay was already striking his fist against the
shoulder of the teenager, he was veryhappy !
* Old Clay had a good time! He told the
teenager that he won't be understood
because the teenager was still very young
only sixteen.
¢ The girls of most of the soldiers were there.
In a corner, a woman was sitting on a
soldier’s lap. She was giggling shrilly.
¢ The high school boy heard Clay said “The
little babe’s just playin’ hard to get, that’s all.
She can’t stay away from me anymore”Elements of Fiction Guide CHILDREN OF THE CITY by AMADIS MA.
GUERRERO(More Recent Short Story, 1971) Philippines
Characters
Victor, a third — grader, dropped out of school, to be
employed as a newspaper boy. Victor’s activist
father was shot and killed when he was eight years
old. Unfortunately, not long after his father’s
death, his mother abandoned him to be with her
lover.
Tio Pedring — Older brother of the mother of Victor.
Tio Pedring made plans to employ Victor as a
newsboy with the assurance of help. Tio Pedring
that time was a newspaper agent. He did not
mention of resuming the boy’s interrupted
schooling.
Nacio - Enjoys a popularity among newspaper boys
and friendly to Victor. He taught Victor to keep a
sharp eye for customers, how to swiftly board a bus
or jeep and alight from it while still in motion ...
Point of View
Third person point of view
Setting/Local color
e The story happened in the late 1980s.
Everything occurred in the dark perilous
busy streets of Manila.
* Inone of the shanties that stood in
Intramuros; along the Boulevard; Rizal
monument in Luneta , Ermita district,
Blumentritt area, Boulevard district, and
Avenida Extension
* An organized defiance, and the setting up of
picket lines in piers against shipping
management, with the strikers and their
families subsisting on funds raised by
student, labor and civic-spirited elements.
« The Boulevard by night began to attract the
boy, the bars filled with foreign sailors, for a7 her parents. Never again would he hold her
face.
© According to their culture, life is not worth
living without a child. Tribal people would
mock a childless man behind his back.
¢ Aman has to have a child so that his name
will live in their tribe.
© Awiyao made a promise to Lumnay to go
back to her arms when he failed to have a
child with Madulimay. Both of them will
vanish from the life of their tribe.
© She would go to the chief of the village, to the
elders, to tell the it was not right. Awiyao
was hers. Let her be the first woman to
complain, to denounce the unwritten rule
that a man may take another woman.
Conflicts
* Man vs. society’s customs
‘Symbol/s
The gongs of the dancers clamorously called in her
ears through the walls.
* The beads are worth twenty fields given to
Lumnay, they stand for the love of Awiyao for
Lumnay
* Awiyao not long ago, decided to throw his
spear on the stairs of her father’s house in
token of his desire to marry her.
¢ The unwritten law demanded that all their
men in their tribe must have a child
* Before, she would dance like a bird tripping
for grains on the ground, beautifully timed to
the beat of the gangsas
¢ She would stretch her hands like the wings of
the mountain eagle. Was not their love as
strong as the river?Elements of Fiction GuideThe Day The Dancers Came (1967) Bienvenido
N.Santos (Philippines)
Characters
Filemon Acayan - Filipino, fifty years old, a U.S.
citizen, He has been a corporal in the US Army,
training at San Luis Obispo. In 1945, after his
work in the US Army, he worked in a hospital as a
menial. He has been in charge of the human
embryos inside their bottles. He has always having
nightmares because of those fetus and infants. So
much so, he decided to look for another pleasant
job as a policeman in the post office in 1945. He
has no more immediate family even in the
Philippines. Fil wants to join the company of
dancers from the Philippines, show them around,
walk with them in the snow, answer their
questions, tell them about the changing seasons in
the US. He enjoys eating adobo and the best
stuffed chicken with Tony in their apartment. Fil
shows greater mastery in their dialect. He has
always been florid, sentimental, and poetic. Fil is
also very sentimental... he can not easily let go of
the things. He is perhaps stuck in the past that
after years of not being able to visit his beloved
couniry, he thought things wouldn't change.
But he has been unfortunately wrong in his
expectations.
‘The erasure of all the recorded concert will help Fil
to accept that time never stops. Beautiful
memories will always be in our hearts and minds.
It is a kind of sentimentality that he wants to have
a record of memories of the Filipino young dancers,
but he ends up losing them all instead. But then
again, maybe it was for the best.
« Tony Antonio Bataller — a retired porter and
unfortunately has been bedridden most of
the time for the last two years. His face has
been healing from severe burns. He has not
been feeling alright. He thinks it’s cancer or
leprosy. He has shared a lot with Fil. They
have tried to be merry on Christmas days,
most of the times get drunk and they become
loud. Fil loves to recite poems in his dialect
and Tony curses all the railroad companies of{ :
America. But, they didn’t talk last
Christmas, they have decided not to celebrate
last time.
Point of View Third person point of view
Setting/Local color | Chicago; sleep valley, drowsy gray; snowy morning
in Chicago; New York
Plot pany times, Fil stares at Tony moaning, crying and
screaming because of the severe pain in his
abdomen. Tony will usually scream that he’s
dying.
« Filhas arrived at the Hamilton Hotel, to see
the Philippine dancers. Fil has been amazed
to remember how beautiful Philippine girls
are. They are all very young. But there are
few elderly men and women who must have
been their chaperons or well-wishers like
him.
¢ Fil wants to ask them: Ilocano ka ? Bicol
ka? Paisano? Comusta? But, suddenly he
feels that he is an outsider. Suddenly he
feels that he doesn’t belong there. The age is
in his face already. His hands is already
horny, Fil doesn’t like to shake hands with
the boy who stands close to him. He seems
to be friendly but Fil has decided to put his
hands in his pocket. How he wishes Tony is
with him. Tony knows more how to socialize
with those young people. Once in a while, Fil
hears them talking in their own native
dialects. Fil could really feel the nostalgia of—| Plot
military exercise to be held within a few days
The story is about the life of Victor, an eight
year old boy whose father was involved in a
company menace because of unjust salaries and
compensations. His father joined the employee's
strike and there he met his death when he was shot
by the police officers managing the chaos in the
strike. Victor was shocked to know the sudden
death of his father on a newspaper. He and his
mother were in deep pain upon hearing his father’s
death.
Soon, her mother had a new husband. She left
Victor to his older brother. There, he was trained to
be a newspaper boy in the dangerous streets of
Avenida. He met there many children doing just
like what he is. In those dark street he learned how
to curse-say bad words and smoke cigarette
because he was influenced by a group of
unmannered teenagers. He found himself alone in
the street, sometimes being beat up by bullies.
The story ended when the author realized how
cruel the world is...
"... And Victor, swirled the life of the city: this city,
flushed with triumphant charity campaigns, where
workers were made to sign statements certifying
they received minimum wage, where millionaire
politicians received Holy Communion every
Sunday, where mothers taught their sons and
daughters the art of begging, where orphans and
children from broken homes slept on pavements
and under darkened bridges, and where best
friends fell out and betrayed one another."
Conflict
One evening four months after the strike began, the
silence of the piers was broken by the six-by-six
trucks. They ran over three strikers and shot to
death two more men.
¢ That evening at the appointed hour he went
over to the newspaper’s building in
downtown, and was greeted by the sight ofTheme/s
)Respect for old customs, tradition and unwritten
Tule in the tribal groups in the northern Philippines
Cultural Values
TRADITION, RESPECT, COMMITMENT TO
CUSTOMS/TRADITIONS, CULTURE AND
RELIGIONTheme/s A father guilty of incestuous desire for his own
daughter.
Love, Freedom & Sacrifices
CULTURAL ACHIEVEMENT, INTELLIGENT, PERSONAL
VALUES SUCCESS, OBTAINING SOCIAL APPROVALSymbol/s
] Filemon’s dream of Tony telling him what to do in
case of a shipwreck "Say ina ship... I mean, in an
emergency, you're stranded without help in the
middle of the Pacific or the Atlantic, you must keep
floating till help comes...” This line pertains to the
scene that happened in the Hamilton Hotel when
he has tried to be friendly and accommodating with
the Filipino dancers, yet he has been rejected, and
thus left him feel so much loneliness.
e Relating this with the dream, it means that
he should not let himself feel so down with
the burden of loneliness that he is carrying.
“He must keep floating till help comes.” Help
can pertain to someone comforting him,
perhaps it can be Tony.
¢ ”Now, let me teach you how to keep afloat”
Those words were not Tony’s words.
Perhaps, the voice who said this could be his
own, telling him that the only one who can
help him to not break down emotionally is
himself. Take things in stride...
Theme/s
‘A story about an old timer Filipino in the US. This
story is a blend of irony and tenderness into the
rootless and lonely lives of men residing in America
but carrying their nationality like a winter coat they
cannot discard.
e About loneliness, alienation, homesickness,
all postwar maladies.
CULTURAL
VALUES
UNIVERSALISM, NATIONALISM, SOCIAL JUSTICE,
EQUALITYElements of Fiction Guide-
a THE WE!
1953 Philippines) DDING DANCE by AMADOR T. DAGUIO
Lumnay - She does not want othe!
Awiyao. She has been a good wile hives has |
nothing to say against her. But unfortunately,
seven harvests was just too long to wait for a child.
She has prayed to Kabunyan so much. Still
Kabunyan never blessed her a child. Well in fact,
she has sacrificed many chickens during her
wives in the whole
fervent prayers. One of the best
village. She had been very proud of her husband's
humour.
Awiyao - He has been a good husband to Lumnay.
He does not want any other woman either. He had
a sense of lightness in saying things, which made
people laugh. Just like Lumnay, he would always
Pree pigs to Kabunyan only for them to have a child
with Lumnay. But still, Kabunyan does not see
them fit to have a child.
Madulimay - She is not as strong as
planting beans, not as fast in cleaning jars,
good in keeping a house clean.
Third person point of view
Lumnay in
not as
Point of View
Setting/Local color Early families are dependent to farming as a means
of sustaining their daily needs. Rice paddies,
dikes, mountain ranges, and rice field.
Plot + Awiyao did not ‘want to force Lumnay to join
his second wedding ceremony. He didn’t
have a choice. He needed to be subservient
to their culture of a man should have an
offspring.
The moment that Awiyao has married
Madulimay then, Lumnay would go back toPlot
The entire household revolved in submission
around Pablo Cabading. The daughter,
mother, the foster-son, the maids and even
the dogs trembled when he lifted his voice.
In 1946, he had shot dead two American
soldiers he caught robbing a neighbor’s
house in Quezon City.
Pablo Cabading couldn't bear to see Lydia
and Leonardo rise and go up together to their
room. The patriarchal father said “Lydia, you
sleep with your mother tonight. She has a
toothache. So, Leonardo went to bed alone
and the incident would always be repeated
with several reasons.
Leonardo became anxious to take his wife
away from that house. The father said “If she
goes with you, I'll shoot her head before your
eyes.”
Pablo Cabading got his submachinegun and
trained it to Gene Quitangon (brother of Dr.
Leonardo) “Produce my daughter at once or
Tl shoot you all down!
The entire room on Zapote Street was
spattered with blood. Lay Mrs. Cabading,
shot in the chest and stomach but was still
alive. Lydia was shot in the heart, and
Leonardo was shot in the breast, they are
both dead. And, Cabading shot himself
fatally, two times.
Conflict/s
Symbol/s
Man VS himself/ psychological
Lydia was always clasping a large crucifix. There
was no expression on her face.
e The drama of the jealous father...CULTURAL STIMULATION, CHALLENGE IN LIFE, DARING
VALUES LIFEElements of Fiction Guide-THE HOUSE ON ZAPOTE STREET by Quijano de
Manila (Philippines)
1968
Characters
Dr. Leonardo Quitangon, a soft-spoken, mild —
mannered, cool-tempered Caviteno medical doctor.
Lydia Cabading - a medical intern and looked like a
sweet unspoiled girl, but there was a slight mystery
about her.
Pablo Cabading, Lydia’s father was a member of the
Manila Police Department. This father had been
known to threaten to arrest young men who stared
at his daughter Lydia on the streets or pressed too
close against her on jeepneys. An Ilocano, he
looked every inch an agent of the law, looked
younger than his inarticulate wife, who was
actually two years younger than him.
Mother Anunciacion Cabading —- A mousy woman
unable to speak save at her husband’s bidding.
Point of View
Third-person point of view. The author makes
comments or describes his characters vividly like
Quijano de Manila’s description of the antagonist
“the drama of the jealous father”
Setting/Local color
The house of Zapote Street is in the current
architectural cliché, a person standing in the sala
can see the doors of the bedrooms and bathroom
just above his head.
Lydia and Leonardo wed at the Cathedral of Manila,
with Senator Ferdinand Marcos and Mrs. Delfin
Montano, wife of the Cavite governor as sponsors.
Then the newlyweds went to live on Zapote Street.Conflict
* Man VS other people’s practices
Symbol/s
Theme/s
CULTURAL
VALUES
Galvanized iron that was the army barracks
Clay symbolizes this type of person: Somebody
who's always laughing and acting like a happy guy.
However, the source of his laughter is meanness,
not friendliness. He laughs at innocent people,
takes advantage of them, uses them like his toys or
pets
* Ms. Rosete is an example of a sweet, pure,
person who is used by Clay. He talks
about her as if she is his possession or
plaything
¢ The main character is the most innocent
person at all. He is young and at first he
thinks that Clay is a true friend. When he
overhears how Clay talks about Ms. Rosete,
he finally realizes that Clay is bad. After
that, he wants nothing more to do with Clay.
Subservience to the dictates of the US, courting
political disaster. Needless to say, culture during
this period developed according to the ideological
direction set by the U.S.
e Asa former colony of the US, the Philippines
upheld the tine that the salvation of the world
lay with free enterprise and American
protection against communism.
NATIONAL SECURITY, STABILITY OF SOCIETY,
SAFETY AND HARMONYthe misa de gallo, barrio fiestas and evening
on the plazas. Fil smells their fragrance also
of camia, ilang-ilang, and dama de noche.
¢ He wants to invite those young people to have
a free tour of Chicago. He wants to take
them around the lakeshore drive, gardens
and parks, museums, department stores,
planetarium. And finally, he wants to offer a
dinner at his apartment on West Sheridan
Road - to eat pork adobo and chicken relleno.
He wants to say “how about it, paisanos?”
e Alas, he has now the courage to invite them.
Fill has started with the boys: “May I invite
you to my apartment?” The boys turned.
down Fil’s invitation. He approached the
group of girls, but they have answered him
“Thank you, but we have no time”
© At long last, Fil has decided not to invite the
young people anymore. “Let them have fun
on their own schedule.” Fil wants to invite
those youth because he remembers the good
old days when he was exactly like them many
years ago.
« Perhaps, they have been advised carefully not
to talk with strangers, to be extra careful in
New York and Chicago, beware of old-timers,
most of them are bums.
¢ To his dismay, none of the dancers take
notice of him or accept his invitation to come
over to his apartment
Conflict
Man VS himself/ psychologicalSymbol/s
| Theme/s
‘scores of barefooted newsboys awaiting the
call to duty. The noise of their conversation,
loud with putang-ina filled the newspaper's
© The destination of Victor was Blumentritt.
Perhaps it wasn’t so difficult after all to sell a
newspaper. The customers included a
dressmaker, a barber, a pharmacist, and a
beautician.
« Victor was able to see young scavengers,
slept inside their pushcarts.
* Onhis second night on the job, Victor met a
group of street boys who began to beat him
up and got all his newspapers !
¢ His best friend Nacio met his death —
violently; he had been run over by a car.
Victor grieved for his friend, and from that
time on he became even more taciturn and
withdrawn.
* The ring-leader, went over to him and, as a
kind of peace offering, held out a cigarette.
Take it. It is very nice to smoke, and it is
easy.
Man vs circumstances/fate
In this city, flushed with triumphant charity |
campaigns, where millionaire politicians received
Holy Communion every Sunday, where orphans
and children from broken homes slept on
pavements and under darkened bridges, and where
best friends fell out and betrayed one another. |
—} The city, flushed with charitable projects, where
millionaire politicians continuously enriching
themselves at the expense of the lower class sector,
where street children slept on pavements and
under darkened bridges.