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How My Brother Leon Brought Home a Wife

Essay by   •  September 29, 2011  •  Essay  •  590 Words (3 Pages)  •  2,037 Views

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How My Brother Leon Brought Home A Wife

This Research Paper How My Brother Leon Brought Home A Wife and other 50 000+ free essays and term papers are available now on ReviewEssays.com

Autor: reviewessays 13 March 2011

Tags: Brother, Brought

Words: 2442 | Pages: 10

Views: 5620

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Analysis Paper:

How My Brother Leon Brought Home a Wife

By Manuel Arguilla

"How My Brother Leon Brought Home a Wife," is a short story written by the highly acclaimed Filipino writer Manuel Arguilla. This award-winning story is a long-standing favorite in Philippine literature. To examine this piece, the author's background must first be considered. Formalistic, historical, and sociological approaches can also be utilized to analyze the story further. Prominent symbols and their interpretations will also be discussed.

About Manuel Arguilla

Manuel Arguilla was born to Crisanto Arguilla and Margarita Estabillo in Barrio Nagrebcan in Bauang, La Union on June 17, 1911. The Arguillas were a humble, hard-working family who farmed the small piece of land they owned to make a living. In school, Manuel was a sharp student who showed promise of being a brilliant writer at an early age. He graduated as salutatorian of his high school and then left La Union to study at the University of Philippines, where he would eventually earn a Bachelor of Science degree in Education. Around the same time, he married fellow writer, Lydia Villanueva,

and moved to Ermita, Manila.

After college, he worked at the Bureau of Public Welfare and taught at the University of Manila. After working at the bureau for a few years, Arguilla was selected

to be the managing editor of The Welfare Advocate, the business' newsletter. He served at the Bureau until 1943, when he was appointed to the Board of Censors. During this time, he was working at a Japanese propaganda agency and also as an agent of the Markings' Guerillas, an anti-Japanese rebel movement. In 1944, the Japanese discovered Arguilla's disloyalty and arrested him. A few months later, he was tortured and executed at Fort Santiago.

Arguilla is best known for

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