"Der Untertan" (The Loyal Subject), "Sonnenfinsternis" (Darkness at Noon) and "Sansibar oder der letzte Grund" (Flight to Afar) - How characters from earlier novels can reflect the zeitgeist of today
Map Data from OpenStreetMap, Grafik Christiane Suppé
From Manila to Naga City and Santa Monica – Philippine literature is as complex and fragmented as the country and its languages. And as is so often the case, literature and its authors know more about the past, present and future than the country itself
From left to right: Mia Tijam, Dr. Mary Jane Guazon Uy, Axel Timo Purr and Trixie Adviento Odiamar
Panel discussion on Bikol literature, colonial history, language, identity and resistance – a multifaceted view of the past and present of Filipino culture
In her emotionally dense and intelligent novel, Caroline Hau tells of the recurring colonial relationships and symbiotic hierarchies that occur in Philippine society and beyond
In 'Moral Abdication: How the World Failed to Stop the Destruction of Gaza', Didier Fassin applies the lens of anthropology’s moral turn. He examines not only what was done to Gaza, but also how Western moral allowed it to happen