Narrativizing marginality and hope: Testimonial narratives of students in a night school
College
College of Liberal Arts
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Scholastican Journal
Volume
3
First Page
19
Last Page
40
Publication Date
2013
Abstract
This exploratory paper suggests a critical reading of students' personal narratives and letters as testimonial narratives or testimonios. As a genre, testimonies are transgressive of canonical literary and literacy practices while giving voice to traditionally marginalized groups. Testimonios, in this regard, always implicate an "absent polyphony of voices," and the imbrication of the private/personal and public/political spheres. Using the letters written by 20 working class students of a night secondary schools in Metro Manila, I did a textual analysis of the materials according to the dominant themes. The paper discusses how the letters and narratives written by students constitute counter representations of working class youth vis-a-vis hegemonic assumptions and representations, such as those propagated and sustained by and within dominant social dispositifs. Furthermore, the paper suggests how these "little narratives" may be deployed as a praxis-oriented pedagogical praxis that subverts the supposed neutrality of classroom discourse and foregrounds lived experiences of subalternity and exclusion.
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Recommended Citation
Moratilla, N. A. (2013). Narrativizing marginality and hope: Testimonial narratives of students in a night school. Scholastican Journal, 3, 19-40. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/9148
Disciplines
Education
Keywords
Evening and continuation school students—Philippines—Social conditions
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