Jose Garcia Villa
Jose Garcia Villa
Jose Garcia Villa
Abstract
The case of Jose Garcia Villa, an exiled Filipino poet
who lived in the U.S. from 1930 to 1997, illustrates the
predicament of the subaltern, neocolonized artist embedded
in what Pierre Bourdieu calls the literary field (see The
Rules of Art). The significance and ultimate value of Villas
accomplishment, as epitomized in Doveglion: Collected
Poems (2008), can only be fully appraised by contextualizing
the genesis and structuring of his themes, styles, and artistic
manifestoes in the fraught historical-political relations
between the imperial hegemon, the United States, and the
dependent, peripheral socioeconomic formation, the
Philippines. Underlying this colonial subsumption is the
global relations of nations and peoples within the inter-state
system of global capitalism between the 1930 Depression in
the US, World War II, and the Cold War period marked by
the communist victory in China, the Korean War, the
IndoChina War, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the
Middle East conflicts. Complicating this grid, further
Invited article, Received June 24, 2009
Proofreaders: Ming-chieh Chen, Hsin-wen Fan, Ying-tzu Chang
* Thanks to Andy Chih-ming Wang for his valuable help in preparing this article for
publication.
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I. Biographical Prologue
Jose Garcia Villa, avant-garde and modernist poet from the
Philippines, died in New York on February 7, 1977. Now virtually
unknown, he is probably one of the most neglected twentiethcentury writers in the English-speaking world. He is being
publicized by astute cultural impresarios and hawkers of the New
York Establishment, thanks to an eclectic multiculturalist ethos that
functions as the benign face of predatory neoliberal financecapital. In spite of this, Villas achievement may be said to
encapsulate the conflicted, dynamic interaction between US
imperial hegemony and a third world dependency, the former
US colony (now a neocolony) in southeast Asia, the Philippines.
Hypothetically his work represents an emergent Filipino American
culture on the margins of the canonical Eurocentric mainstream, a
product of US tutelage and the peculiar hybridthe postcolonial
trademark termconjuncture of Spanish, Asian, and Malayan
sociocultural strains, perhaps the missing third text of the
ventriloquial subaltern. Anyone undertaking a genealogical
anatomy of Villas life and works is bound to raise scandalous
questions of national autonomy, colonial subjugation, crosscultural linkages, and the possibilities of a Weltliteratur in the
epoch of cyber-globalizatiion. Ultimately Villa may turn out tobe,
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This historic photograph, taken by e.e. cummings wife in a party at New Yorks
Gotham Book Mart during the 1940s, features Villa in the middle and other writers.
Gore Vidal is on Villas left, and W. H. Auden on Villa right, on the ladder. The
rest are Tennessee Williams, the two Sitwells (Osbert and Edith), Horace Gregory,
Marya Zaturenska, Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, Randall Jarrel, Delmore
Schwartz, Charles Henry Ford, William Rose Benet, Stephen Spender, Richard
Eberhart.
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References
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W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, Harvard University
104 Mount Auburn St., 3R, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A.
E-mail: philcsc@gmail.com