Ang Imhr.ca ay tumutulong sa iyo na makahanap ng mga sagot sa iyong mga katanungan mula sa isang komunidad ng mga eksperto. Maranasan ang kaginhawaan ng pagkuha ng eksaktong sagot sa iyong mga tanong mula sa isang dedikadong komunidad ng mga propesyonal. Kumuha ng detalyado at eksaktong sagot sa iyong mga tanong mula sa dedikadong komunidad ng mga eksperto sa aming Q&A platform.
Sagot :
Explanation:
- The early stages of Filipino Literature consist of the Pre-Spanish period, the Spanish period, and the Propaganda and Revolutionary Periods.
- In the Pre-Spanish period, literature was in oral form as the technology of printing wasn’t available yet. Works such as epics, legends, folklore, salawikain, bugtong, sawikain, songs such as the Oyayi or Hele are passed on from generation to generation and they are still well-known up to this day as they are being taught in schools.
- Philippine Literature changed during the Spanish Period. It was centered on the Christian faith.
- Pre-Spanish literary types continued to develop; however, there was a gradual shift of interest from nature and natural phenomena to the lives of the saints, hymns, miracles, and invocations based on the teachings of the Catholic Church.
- The works during this time are imitative of the Spanish theme, forms, and traditions.
- The corrido, awit, dalit, cenaculo, moro-moro, duplo and karagatan, and zarzuela are reflective of the said characteristics. Religious matters were in prose as novenas and prayer books, biographies of the saints, tales, and novels.
- The Filipinos were able to retain their native traditions and poems in the field of poetry reflected as lyrical folksongs and riddles. Some examples of songs are Bahay Kubo, kundiman, and tapat. Francisco Baltazar also was popular during this time because of his “Florante at Laura”. Events such as the exposure of the Filipinos to Europe’s liberal idealism, the opening of the Suez Canal, the Spanish Revolution in 1868, and the martyrdom of Gomburza led to Filipino nationalism.
- This gave birth to two movements during this time – the Propaganda movement and the Revolutionary movement. The Propaganda movement was reformatory in objective and its members are college students mostly based in Spain. The primary propagandists were Jose Rizal, Marcelo H. del Pilar, and Graciano Lopez-Jaena.
- The exposure of the evils of the Spanish rule in the Philippines was because of Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo and has paved the way to a revolution against Spain. Del Pilar’s essays and editorials in Diariong Tagalog which he founded with Lopez-Jaena’s articles in La Solidaridad which he was an editor reflected nationalism that was dominant at this time.
Pinahahalagahan namin ang iyong pagbisita. Sana'y naging kapaki-pakinabang ang mga sagot na iyong natagpuan. Huwag mag-atubiling bumalik para sa karagdagang impormasyon. Pinahahalagahan namin ang iyong oras. Mangyaring bumalik muli para sa higit pang maaasahang mga sagot sa anumang mga tanong na mayroon ka. Maraming salamat sa paggamit ng Imhr.ca. Bumalik muli para sa karagdagang kaalaman mula sa aming mga eksperto.