The use of she is based on the empirical data that she wears a skirt as uniform and fairly looked more of a girl. I remembered seeing her play basketball with the boys, in her skirt, or takyan, the vernacular term for sipa only with a piece of hardened alloy as base, which was a very popular pastime during recess with us boys.
Vizconde was the first person to come to mind when I read Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex. When I picked up the book, I had a remotest idea that the character already symbolized the title, that the subject matter is one of gender identity crisis, which when u think about it becomes more complex in a hermaphrodite’s case as the story of the novel’s protagonist would imply, when all I was thinking of Middlesex was a city in England or Michigan.
(Interestingly, I'm currently reading Strange Tribe by John Hemingway, grandson of Ernest. It's a family memoir, so personal that it traces the similarities between John's father Gregory's cross-dressing deviance to early hints in Ernest childhood and even in his literary works.)
If Calliope Stephanides, the engaging narrator, is a living person, his/her life would be perfect fodder for the media. Life would be a living hell and she would be the most talked about person in recent history. That’s because we don’t know of any famous, living or otherwise, hermaphrodite whose life is very much an open book. Or nobody, perhaps in
Pages flew like leaps of calendar leaves in a generation – three in fact. For Eugenides cover three generations of the Stephanides family, from pre-war era in Mt.Olympus to the raucous 60s, it captures the very essence of
The New York Times says in the back cover that
7 comments:
wow, man... you're a very very VVVVVVVEEERRY wide reader. sana marami din akong librong nababasa. hanggang hiram lang kasi ako. hehehe!
nakakatuwa naman yung si vizconde. may balita ka pa sa kanya?
i miss playing that 'sipa'... adik din ako dyan. i stopped playing coz i had an accident related to it :)
nagkataon lang na naka-imprenta na sa DNA ko ang pagbabasa. hehehe
i read thid book many years back. not exactly one of my favorite books but it is a good read.
nancy navalta, isdatchu?
kinsa gani ni si nancy teng? hehe. i assume hermaphrodite ni sya?
Hi! I run through your blog and I found it very informative... in a sense that there were updates that only here I found some answers.. why? I missed some up in news and chickas:) Thanks again!
Thanks anonymous.
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