Criticism as a Weapon

aida rivera, amado v. hernandez, an agenda, antonio gramsci, barbara harlow, being filipino, bucknell university press, but stevan javellana, carlos bulosan, class, communist party, criticism, delia  aguilar, e. only by struggle, e. san juan, el ultimo adios, essays, february uprising, filipina feminism, filipino, for san juan, francisco lazaro, giraffe books, hernández, intellectuals, international publishers, jose burgos, jose rizal, juan, la loba negra, liberation, literary, lope k. santos, movement, national democratic hegemony, new criticism, overseas contract workers, overseas filipino workers, permanent cultural revolution, philippine culture, philippine fiction, philippine literary relations, philippines, politics, polytechnic university, quezon city, readers, reading, revolutionary, rice grains, rizal, san juan, sexual politics, sinai hamada, stevan javellana, struggle, toward socialist feminism, union del trabajo, united states, weapon  e. san juan, without seeing, writers