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21ST CENTURY
LITERATURE
Various dimensions of Philippine
literary history from pre-colonial to
contemporary
At the end of this lesson,
you should be able to
identify the characteristics
of pre-colonial literature of
the Philippines.
• What textsare
considered pre-
colonial literature?
• The pre colonial literature includes
all literature produced before the
Spanish colonization like chants,
proverbs, songs,
passed down from
generation
and folk narratives. These were
all
to
generation by word of mouth.
• Philippine folk narratives are varied
and distinct. They depict the people’s
livelihood, customs, and traditions.
What’s the word! That’s the
word!
1.OLTAKFEL -
2.bleaf -
3.endleg
- 4.thym
- 5.pcie
• Folktale – This is a
characteristically anonymous,
timeless, and placeless tale
circulated orally among a
people.
• Fable – This features animal
characters or inanimate objects
that behave like people.
• Legend – This is presented as
• Myth – This is told to explain a
belief, a practice, or a natural
phenomenon.
• Epic – This narrative poem
celebrates the adventures and
achievements of a hero.
• Folktal
es
emphasize certain
virtues,
• Folktales about Juan are very popular.
Some
and some serve as
warning about behavior. Also, some are for the
reader’s amusement.
• Example 1:
• Juan Gathers Guavas (A Tagalog Folktale)
• One day several neighbors came to
Juan’s home to visit. His father
wanted to give the guests something
to eat, so he sent Juan to get some
ripe guavas for them.
• Full of mischief, Juan decided to play
a joke on his father’s guests. He went
to get the guavas and ate all of them
while thinking of a good joke. Then
he saw a wasp’s nest hung nearby.
With some difficulty he managed to
take it down and put it into a tight
basket. He hastened home and gave
the basket to his father. Quickly he
left the room where the guests were
and closed the door and fastened it.
• As soon as Juan’s father opened the
basket, the wasps flew over the
room. With the door locked, the
people fought to get out of the
windows. After a while Juan opened
the door. When he saw the swollen
faces of the people, he cried.
• “What fine, rich guavas you must
have had! They have made you all
so fat!”
• Juan Pusong and His Father’s Cows (A
Visayan Folktale)
• One day Juan Pusong's father put his
cows out to pasture. Juan slipped away
from home and took the cows into the
forest and tied
them there. When his father found out
that the cows were missing, he looked
around for them. While looking, he ran
into his son.
• “Where did you come from?” he asked.
• “I just came from school, Father. How
• “You don’t say!" said Juan.
• By that time, everybody knew
about Juan’s power as a seer.
So, he took a
little book from his pocket and
looked into it. He said, “Our cows
are tied together in the forest.” So,
his father went to the forest and
found the cows.
• Later on, people would discover that
Juan could not read even his own
• Fable
• The monkey is a common animal character in
Philippine fables. It is often depicted as a cunning
animal.
• The Monkey and the Crocodile (A Tagalog
Fable)
• One day, a monkey saw a tall macopa
tree laden with ripe fruits, which stood
by a wide river. It was hungry, so it
climbed the tree and ate all of the fruits.
When it climbed down, it could find no
means by which to cross the river. Then
it saw a young crocodile who had just
woken up from its siesta. It said to the
crocodile in a friendly way, “My dear
• The crocodile was greatly surprised
by the monkey’s amicable
salutation. So, it answered humbly,
“Oh, yes! If there is anything I can
do for you, I shall be glad to do it.”
The monkey then told the crocodile
that it wanted to get to the other
side of the river. Then the crocodile
said, “I’ll take you there with all my
heart. Just sit on my back, and we’ll
go at once.”
• The monkey sat firmly on the
crocodile’s back, and they began to
move. In a short while they reached
the middle of the stream. Then the
crocodile began to laugh aloud. “You
foolish monkey!” it said, “I’ll eat your
liver and kidneys, for I’m very
hungry.” The monkey became
nervous. Trying to conceal its anxiety,
it said,
• “I’m very glad that you mentioned the
matter. I thought myself that you
might be hungry, so I have prepared
my liver and kidneys for your dinner.
Unfortunately, in our haste to depart, I
left them hanging on the macopa
tree. Let us return, and I’ll get them
for you.”
• Convinced that the monkey was
telling the truth, the crocodile turned
around and swam back to the
direction of the macopa tree. When
they got near the riverbank, the
monkey nimbly jumped up onto the
land and scampered up the tree.
The crocodile came to realize what
happened and said, “I am a fool.”
• Legend
• There are different Filipino
legends of the great flood. The
story of Bukidnon, for instance,
tells that a huge crab caused the
water to rise by going into the
sea. On the other hand, the
Igorot story tells that the sons of
Lumawig the Great Spirit caused
the flood.
• The Flood Story (A Legend of Bukidnon)
• A long time ago there was a very
big
When it went in, it
crowded
crab which crawled into the
sea.
the
water out so that it ran all over the
earth and covered all the land.
Now about one moon before the
flood happened, a wise man had
told the people that they must
build a large raft.
• They did as he commanded and
cut many large trees until they
had enough to make three layers.
These they bound tightly
together; when it was done, they
fastened the raft with a long
rattan cord to a big pole in the
earth.
• Soon after the raft was done,
the flood came. White water
poured out of the hills, and
the sea rose
and
covere
d
mountains.
even the
highest
The people
and
animals on the raft were
safe, but all the
others drowned.
• Soon the waters went down,
and the raft was again on the
ground. It was near their old
home, for the rattan cord had
held.
• The people on the raft together
with the animals were the only
ones left on the whole earth.
• Example 2:
• The Flood Story (A Legend of the Igorot)
• Once upon a time, the world was flat,
and there were no mountains. There
lived two sons of Lumawig, the Great
Spirit. The brothers were fond of
hunting; since no mountains had
formed, there was no good place to
catch wild pig and deer. The older
brother said, “Let us cause water to
flow over all the world and cover it,
and then mountains will rise up.”
• So, the brothers caused water to flow
over all the earth. When it was
covered, they took the head-basket
of the town and set it for a trap. They
were very much pleased when they
went to look at their trap, for they had
caught not only many wild pigs and
deer but also many people.
• Lumawig looked down from his place in
the sky and saw that his sons had
flooded the earth. However, there was
just one spot which was not covered. All
the people in the world had been
drowned except a brother and a sister
who lived in Pokis.
• Then Lumawig descended, and he
called to the boy and girl, saying, “Oh,
you are still alive.”
• “Yes,” answered the boy, “we are still
alive, but we are very cold.”
• So, Lumawig commanded his
dog and deer to get fire for the
boy and girl. The dog and the
deer swam quickly away.
Lumawig waited a long time,
but the dog and the deer did
not return. All the time the boy
and girl were growing colder.
• Finally, Lumawig himself went
after the dog and the deer.
When he reached them, he
said, “Why are you so long in
bringing the fire to Pokis? Get
ready and come quickly while
I watch you, for the boy and
girl are very cold.”
• Then the dog and the deer took the fire
and started to swim through the flood.
When they had gone only a little way, the
fire was put out.
• Lumawig commanded the dog and the
deer to get more fire, and they did so.
However, they swam only a little way
again when that of the deer went out.
That of the dog would have been
extinguished also had not Lumawig gone
quickly to him and taken it.
• As soon as LumawigreachedPokis,
he
built a big fire which warmed
the brother and
sister. The
water
evaporatedso that the world was as it
was before, except that now there
were
married
an
d
mountains. The brother
had
children
,
and
siste
r and
thus
there cameto be many people on
the earth.
• Myth
• There are Philippine versions
of the creation myth. The
Igorot’s story tells that
Lumawig the Great Spirit
created people. On the other
hand, the Tagalog story
tells that the first man and
woman came from a bamboo.
The Creation (An Igorot
Myth)
IN THE BEGINNING, THERE WERE NO
people on the earth. Lumawig, the
Great Spirit, came down from the sky
and cut many reeds. He divided the
reeds into pairs which he placed in
different parts of the world, and then
he said to them, “You must speak.”
Immediately the reeds became
people, and in each place was a man
and a woman who could talk.
However, the language of each couple
Then Lumawig commanded
each man and woman to marry,
which they did. By and by there
were many children, all
speaking the same language
as their parents. The children
married and had many children
of their own. In this way, there
came to be many people on the
Now, Lumawig saw that there were
several things which the people on the
earth needed to use, so he set to work
to supply them. He created salt and
told the inhabitants of one place to boil
it down and sell it to their neighbors.
However, the people could not
understand the directions. The next
time he visited them, they had not
touched the salt. So, he took the salt
away from them and gave it to the
The people of Mayinit did as Lumawig
directed. Because of their obedience, he
told them that they should always be
owners of the salt and that the other
peoples must buy of them.
Then Lumawig went to the people of
Bontoc and told them to get clay and make
pots. They got the clay, but they did not
understand the molding; the jars were not
well shaped. Because of their failure,
Lumawig told them that they would always
have to buy their jars, and he removed the
Lumawig told the people of
Samoki what to do, and they did
just as he said. Their jars were well
shaped and beautiful. Then
Lumawig saw that they were fit
owners of the pottery, and he told
them that they should always make
many jars to sell.
In this way, Lumawig taught the
people and brought to them all the
THE CREATION (A
TAGALOG MYTH)
When the world first began there was
no land. There were only the sea and the
sky, and between them was a kite. One
day the bird which had nowhere to light
grew tired of flying about, so she stirred
up the sea until it threw its waters against
the sky. The sky, in order to restrain the
sea, showered upon it many islands until
it could no longer rise, but ran back and
forth. Then the sky ordered the kite to
alight on one of the islands to build its
nest, and to leave the sea and the sky in
Now at this time the land
breeze and the sea breeze were
married, and they had a bamboo
as their child. One day when the
bamboo was floating about on the
water, it struck the feet of the kite
which was on the beach. The bird,
angry that anything should strike it,
pecked at the bamboo. Out of one
section came a man and from the
The earthquake called on all
the birds and fish to see what
should be done with the man
and the woman, and it was
decided that they should marry.
Many children were born to the
couple, and from them came all
the different races of people.
After a while the parents grew
very tired of having so many idle
and useless children around. They
wished to be rid of them, but they
knew of no place to send them to.
Time went on, and the children
became so numerous that the
parents enjoyed no peace. One
day, in desperation, the father
seized a stick and began beating
The beating frightened the
children so much that they fled
in different directions. Some
seek hidden rooms in the
house. Some concealed
themselves in the walls. Some
ran outside, while others hid in
the fireplace. Several fled to the
sea.
Now it happened that those who
went into the hidden rooms of the
house later became the chiefs of the
islands; and those who concealed
themselves in the walls became
slaves. Those who ran outside were
free men; and those who hid in the
fireplace became negroes; while those
who fled to the sea were gone many
years, and when their children came
• EPI
C BIAG NI LAM-
ANG
This Ilocano epic tells the
adventures of Lam-ang, a man with
supernatural powers. He goes to war
at nine-months- old and seeks the
killers of his father. He embarks on a
quest with his animal friends and
meets his future wife, Innes Kanoyan.
He is swallowed by a fish and
resurrected from death by his animal
HINILAW
OD
This epic is of the Sulod, a group
of people living in the mountains of
central Panay. It tells the story of
three very strong men, namely,
Labaw Donggon, Humadapnon, and
Dumalapdap. They are the sons of
Datu Paubari, the ruler of Halawod,
and the goddess Alunsina. The
exploits of each son concerns
beautiful women that he wants to
Darangan
This Maranao epic depicts the
adventures of a brave warrior
named Bantugan. He owns a
magical sword protected by a
spirit. After a battle, he rests and
accidentally falls into the water. A
crocodile finds him and brings him
to the enemies. He fights, regains
his strength, and wins the war.
• The pre colonial literature of
the Philippines includes all
literature
produced before the Spanish
colonization. It includes chants,
proverbs, songs, spells, and
different folk narratives like folk
tales, fables, legends, myths, and
epics that were all passed down
from generation to generation

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Pre Colonial Literature.pptx

  • 1. 21ST CENTURY LITERATURE Various dimensions of Philippine literary history from pre-colonial to contemporary
  • 2. At the end of this lesson, you should be able to identify the characteristics of pre-colonial literature of the Philippines.
  • 3. • What textsare considered pre- colonial literature?
  • 4. • The pre colonial literature includes all literature produced before the Spanish colonization like chants, proverbs, songs, passed down from generation and folk narratives. These were all to generation by word of mouth. • Philippine folk narratives are varied and distinct. They depict the people’s livelihood, customs, and traditions.
  • 5. What’s the word! That’s the word! 1.OLTAKFEL - 2.bleaf - 3.endleg - 4.thym - 5.pcie
  • 6. • Folktale – This is a characteristically anonymous, timeless, and placeless tale circulated orally among a people. • Fable – This features animal characters or inanimate objects that behave like people. • Legend – This is presented as
  • 7. • Myth – This is told to explain a belief, a practice, or a natural phenomenon. • Epic – This narrative poem celebrates the adventures and achievements of a hero.
  • 8. • Folktal es emphasize certain virtues, • Folktales about Juan are very popular. Some and some serve as warning about behavior. Also, some are for the reader’s amusement. • Example 1: • Juan Gathers Guavas (A Tagalog Folktale) • One day several neighbors came to Juan’s home to visit. His father wanted to give the guests something to eat, so he sent Juan to get some ripe guavas for them.
  • 9. • Full of mischief, Juan decided to play a joke on his father’s guests. He went to get the guavas and ate all of them while thinking of a good joke. Then he saw a wasp’s nest hung nearby. With some difficulty he managed to take it down and put it into a tight basket. He hastened home and gave the basket to his father. Quickly he left the room where the guests were and closed the door and fastened it.
  • 10. • As soon as Juan’s father opened the basket, the wasps flew over the room. With the door locked, the people fought to get out of the windows. After a while Juan opened the door. When he saw the swollen faces of the people, he cried. • “What fine, rich guavas you must have had! They have made you all so fat!”
  • 11. • Juan Pusong and His Father’s Cows (A Visayan Folktale) • One day Juan Pusong's father put his cows out to pasture. Juan slipped away from home and took the cows into the forest and tied them there. When his father found out that the cows were missing, he looked around for them. While looking, he ran into his son. • “Where did you come from?” he asked. • “I just came from school, Father. How
  • 12. • “You don’t say!" said Juan. • By that time, everybody knew about Juan’s power as a seer. So, he took a little book from his pocket and looked into it. He said, “Our cows are tied together in the forest.” So, his father went to the forest and found the cows. • Later on, people would discover that Juan could not read even his own
  • 13. • Fable • The monkey is a common animal character in Philippine fables. It is often depicted as a cunning animal. • The Monkey and the Crocodile (A Tagalog Fable) • One day, a monkey saw a tall macopa tree laden with ripe fruits, which stood by a wide river. It was hungry, so it climbed the tree and ate all of the fruits. When it climbed down, it could find no means by which to cross the river. Then it saw a young crocodile who had just woken up from its siesta. It said to the crocodile in a friendly way, “My dear
  • 14. • The crocodile was greatly surprised by the monkey’s amicable salutation. So, it answered humbly, “Oh, yes! If there is anything I can do for you, I shall be glad to do it.” The monkey then told the crocodile that it wanted to get to the other side of the river. Then the crocodile said, “I’ll take you there with all my heart. Just sit on my back, and we’ll go at once.”
  • 15. • The monkey sat firmly on the crocodile’s back, and they began to move. In a short while they reached the middle of the stream. Then the crocodile began to laugh aloud. “You foolish monkey!” it said, “I’ll eat your liver and kidneys, for I’m very hungry.” The monkey became nervous. Trying to conceal its anxiety, it said,
  • 16. • “I’m very glad that you mentioned the matter. I thought myself that you might be hungry, so I have prepared my liver and kidneys for your dinner. Unfortunately, in our haste to depart, I left them hanging on the macopa tree. Let us return, and I’ll get them for you.”
  • 17. • Convinced that the monkey was telling the truth, the crocodile turned around and swam back to the direction of the macopa tree. When they got near the riverbank, the monkey nimbly jumped up onto the land and scampered up the tree. The crocodile came to realize what happened and said, “I am a fool.”
  • 18. • Legend • There are different Filipino legends of the great flood. The story of Bukidnon, for instance, tells that a huge crab caused the water to rise by going into the sea. On the other hand, the Igorot story tells that the sons of Lumawig the Great Spirit caused the flood.
  • 19. • The Flood Story (A Legend of Bukidnon) • A long time ago there was a very big When it went in, it crowded crab which crawled into the sea. the water out so that it ran all over the earth and covered all the land. Now about one moon before the flood happened, a wise man had told the people that they must build a large raft.
  • 20. • They did as he commanded and cut many large trees until they had enough to make three layers. These they bound tightly together; when it was done, they fastened the raft with a long rattan cord to a big pole in the earth.
  • 21. • Soon after the raft was done, the flood came. White water poured out of the hills, and the sea rose and covere d mountains. even the highest The people and animals on the raft were safe, but all the others drowned.
  • 22. • Soon the waters went down, and the raft was again on the ground. It was near their old home, for the rattan cord had held. • The people on the raft together with the animals were the only ones left on the whole earth.
  • 23. • Example 2: • The Flood Story (A Legend of the Igorot) • Once upon a time, the world was flat, and there were no mountains. There lived two sons of Lumawig, the Great Spirit. The brothers were fond of hunting; since no mountains had formed, there was no good place to catch wild pig and deer. The older brother said, “Let us cause water to flow over all the world and cover it, and then mountains will rise up.”
  • 24. • So, the brothers caused water to flow over all the earth. When it was covered, they took the head-basket of the town and set it for a trap. They were very much pleased when they went to look at their trap, for they had caught not only many wild pigs and deer but also many people.
  • 25. • Lumawig looked down from his place in the sky and saw that his sons had flooded the earth. However, there was just one spot which was not covered. All the people in the world had been drowned except a brother and a sister who lived in Pokis. • Then Lumawig descended, and he called to the boy and girl, saying, “Oh, you are still alive.” • “Yes,” answered the boy, “we are still alive, but we are very cold.”
  • 26. • So, Lumawig commanded his dog and deer to get fire for the boy and girl. The dog and the deer swam quickly away. Lumawig waited a long time, but the dog and the deer did not return. All the time the boy and girl were growing colder.
  • 27. • Finally, Lumawig himself went after the dog and the deer. When he reached them, he said, “Why are you so long in bringing the fire to Pokis? Get ready and come quickly while I watch you, for the boy and girl are very cold.”
  • 28. • Then the dog and the deer took the fire and started to swim through the flood. When they had gone only a little way, the fire was put out. • Lumawig commanded the dog and the deer to get more fire, and they did so. However, they swam only a little way again when that of the deer went out. That of the dog would have been extinguished also had not Lumawig gone quickly to him and taken it.
  • 29. • As soon as LumawigreachedPokis, he built a big fire which warmed the brother and sister. The water evaporatedso that the world was as it was before, except that now there were married an d mountains. The brother had children , and siste r and thus there cameto be many people on the earth.
  • 30.
  • 31. • Myth • There are Philippine versions of the creation myth. The Igorot’s story tells that Lumawig the Great Spirit created people. On the other hand, the Tagalog story tells that the first man and woman came from a bamboo.
  • 32. The Creation (An Igorot Myth) IN THE BEGINNING, THERE WERE NO people on the earth. Lumawig, the Great Spirit, came down from the sky and cut many reeds. He divided the reeds into pairs which he placed in different parts of the world, and then he said to them, “You must speak.” Immediately the reeds became people, and in each place was a man and a woman who could talk. However, the language of each couple
  • 33. Then Lumawig commanded each man and woman to marry, which they did. By and by there were many children, all speaking the same language as their parents. The children married and had many children of their own. In this way, there came to be many people on the
  • 34. Now, Lumawig saw that there were several things which the people on the earth needed to use, so he set to work to supply them. He created salt and told the inhabitants of one place to boil it down and sell it to their neighbors. However, the people could not understand the directions. The next time he visited them, they had not touched the salt. So, he took the salt away from them and gave it to the
  • 35. The people of Mayinit did as Lumawig directed. Because of their obedience, he told them that they should always be owners of the salt and that the other peoples must buy of them. Then Lumawig went to the people of Bontoc and told them to get clay and make pots. They got the clay, but they did not understand the molding; the jars were not well shaped. Because of their failure, Lumawig told them that they would always have to buy their jars, and he removed the
  • 36. Lumawig told the people of Samoki what to do, and they did just as he said. Their jars were well shaped and beautiful. Then Lumawig saw that they were fit owners of the pottery, and he told them that they should always make many jars to sell. In this way, Lumawig taught the people and brought to them all the
  • 37. THE CREATION (A TAGALOG MYTH) When the world first began there was no land. There were only the sea and the sky, and between them was a kite. One day the bird which had nowhere to light grew tired of flying about, so she stirred up the sea until it threw its waters against the sky. The sky, in order to restrain the sea, showered upon it many islands until it could no longer rise, but ran back and forth. Then the sky ordered the kite to alight on one of the islands to build its nest, and to leave the sea and the sky in
  • 38. Now at this time the land breeze and the sea breeze were married, and they had a bamboo as their child. One day when the bamboo was floating about on the water, it struck the feet of the kite which was on the beach. The bird, angry that anything should strike it, pecked at the bamboo. Out of one section came a man and from the
  • 39. The earthquake called on all the birds and fish to see what should be done with the man and the woman, and it was decided that they should marry. Many children were born to the couple, and from them came all the different races of people.
  • 40. After a while the parents grew very tired of having so many idle and useless children around. They wished to be rid of them, but they knew of no place to send them to. Time went on, and the children became so numerous that the parents enjoyed no peace. One day, in desperation, the father seized a stick and began beating
  • 41. The beating frightened the children so much that they fled in different directions. Some seek hidden rooms in the house. Some concealed themselves in the walls. Some ran outside, while others hid in the fireplace. Several fled to the sea.
  • 42. Now it happened that those who went into the hidden rooms of the house later became the chiefs of the islands; and those who concealed themselves in the walls became slaves. Those who ran outside were free men; and those who hid in the fireplace became negroes; while those who fled to the sea were gone many years, and when their children came
  • 43. • EPI C BIAG NI LAM- ANG This Ilocano epic tells the adventures of Lam-ang, a man with supernatural powers. He goes to war at nine-months- old and seeks the killers of his father. He embarks on a quest with his animal friends and meets his future wife, Innes Kanoyan. He is swallowed by a fish and resurrected from death by his animal
  • 44. HINILAW OD This epic is of the Sulod, a group of people living in the mountains of central Panay. It tells the story of three very strong men, namely, Labaw Donggon, Humadapnon, and Dumalapdap. They are the sons of Datu Paubari, the ruler of Halawod, and the goddess Alunsina. The exploits of each son concerns beautiful women that he wants to
  • 45. Darangan This Maranao epic depicts the adventures of a brave warrior named Bantugan. He owns a magical sword protected by a spirit. After a battle, he rests and accidentally falls into the water. A crocodile finds him and brings him to the enemies. He fights, regains his strength, and wins the war.
  • 46. • The pre colonial literature of the Philippines includes all literature produced before the Spanish colonization. It includes chants, proverbs, songs, spells, and different folk narratives like folk tales, fables, legends, myths, and epics that were all passed down from generation to generation