The Rosales Saga
300px
Book covers for F. Sionil José's novel series The Rosales Saga.
|
|
Author | F. Sionil José |
---|---|
Country | Philippines |
Language | English |
Genre | Fiction |
Publisher | Solidaridad Publishing House, Inc. (Philippines) |
The Rosales Saga, also known as the Rosales Novels, is a series of five historical and political novels written by Filipino National Artist F. Sionil José. Chronologically, it is composed of five interconnected novels, namely Po-on (written in 1984), Tree (written in 1978), My Brother, My Executioner (written in 1973), The Pretenders (written in 1962), and Mass (written in 1973).[1][2] The Rosales Saga traced the five generations of two families, namely the Samsons (poor farmers) and the Asperri (wealthy mestizos) through Spanish and American periods in the history of the Philippines up until the period after Philippine Independence.[3] José begun writing the series in 1962 and completed it in 1984.[1]
Contents
General description
All of José’s five novels are in set in Rosales, Pangasinan in Luzon, Philippines. José uses a variation of styles for the novels. José also focuses on different families with different social statuses. The object that connects and binds these families is the “giant Balete tree" located at the plaza of Rosales town.[1]
Among the common themes in the Rosales Novels are the intimate relationships and marriages between cousins, the father figure who is beaten up by the political and social structures, vengeful and aggressive attacks on persons who symbolize the repression and subjugation, the love-hate relationship between the characters and the town of Rosales, as well as its barrios such as Cabugawan, Carmay and Sipnget.[1]
Narrative sequence
Po-on
The first book in the Rosales series, Po-on, focuses on the Samson family. The novel is set during the Philippine–American War when revolution and nationalism were presented as the solution to the social and political problems in the Philippines.[3]
Tree
The second novel,Tree, pursues the life of the unnamed grandson of Don Jacinto, the overseer of the Asperris and protector of the Samsons in Po-on. The unnamed narrator witnesses the adversity of the Filipino peasants under the encomienda system during the Spanish colonial regime, as well as the resulting uprisings created by the peasants. However, the nameless story-teller is unable to free himself from his own position that carries cultural and economic benefits.[3]
The succeeding three books after Tree reinforce the existing strain between Philippine colonial heritage and bona fide patriotism.[3]
My Brother, My Executioner
The third novel, My Brother, My Executioner, concentrates on the life of Luis Asperri and his half-brother Victor during the 1950s, a time that was plagued with the Hukbalahap rebellion. Luis Asperri is the illegitimate son of Don Vicente Asperri. Don Asperri takes Luis Asperri as an heir due to the absence of a legitimate son by the former. Luis abandons his peasant roots in order to embrace the status of a landowner. His half-brother Victor warns Luis that if the peasantry does not receive economic justice, the Hukbalahap insurgents would annihilate the elite class. In the end, Luis expects his demise at the hands of the Hukbalahap rebels.[3]
The Pretenders
The fourth novel, The Pretenders, recalls the life of Antonio “Tony” Samson, the son of Victor, the half-brother of Luis Asperri in My Brother, My Executioner (Victor was imprisoned for life for murdering Luis Asperri). Antonio Samson obtains a PhD degree from Harvard University in the United States. By marrying a rich Filipina mestiza, Antonio Samson becomes an Ilustrado and works for his father-in-law. As a result, Antonio Samson is unable to marry his true love and cousin, Emy, with whom he sired an illegitimate son. Feeling undeserving of Emy and his son because of his denunciation of his peasant origins, Antonio Samson committs suicide.[3]
Mass
In the fifth and last Rosales Novel, Mass, the timeline jumps forward into the 1970s, to narrate the life of Pepe Samson, the illegitimate son of Antonio Samson and his cousin Emy. Pepe Samson moves to Manila to attend college. He becomes a member of a revolutionary group called The Brotherhood. The novel ends with a scene with Pepe leaving Manila to adhere to the cause of the mountain guerrillas.[3]
Connection with Viajero
In José’s separate novel Viajero, which is not a part of the Rosales Saga series, Pepe Samson reappears as a full-pledged insurgent, while some other Rosales Novels characters also resurface.[3]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Yoser, Elizabeth G. Under the Balete Tree: F. Sionil José’s Rosales Novels, World Literature Today, Vol. 62, No. 1 (Winter, 1988), University of Oklahoma, pp. 82-84, jstor.org
- ↑ Yabes, Leopoldo Y. and Judson Knight. "The Rosales Saga" by F(rancisco) Sionil José, Contemporary Novelists, 2001, The Gale Group Inc., Farmington Hills, Michigan, encyclopedia.com
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Delmendo, Sharon. The Rosales Novels, The Star-entangled Banner: One Hundred Years of America in the Philippines, books.google.com