Matching Items (6)
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Description
The Philippine Sea refers to the East and West Philippine Sea that are within the sovereign territory of the 7,641 islands of the Philippine archipelago. Historically, Spain, the United States, and Japan have colonized the islands, and the United States and China continue to maintain imperial interests in the area.

The Philippine Sea refers to the East and West Philippine Sea that are within the sovereign territory of the 7,641 islands of the Philippine archipelago. Historically, Spain, the United States, and Japan have colonized the islands, and the United States and China continue to maintain imperial interests in the area. Filipino/a/x diasporic activists in the U.S. and allies have participated in the anti-imperial struggle in support of demilitarization of the Pacific and of neo-colonized states across the globe. Responding to the problematics of anti-imperialism and solidarity, this dissertation advances the concept of agos or moving relations to attune to the sea as an analytic in theorizing activism, communication, and performance. This project was written on the unceded ancestral homelands of the Onk Akimel O’odham and Xalychidom Piipash, was inspired by the works of Black and Indigenous communities and scholars, and was influenced by Kale Fajardo’s notion of crosscurrents and Loma Cuevas-Hewitt’s concept of archipelagic poetics. Across critical organizational communication, critical intercultural communication, and performance studies, agos theorizes the relationalities of movements and the movements of relationalities. Utilizing critical qualitative, rhetorical, and performance methods, this project develops three instantiations of agos. In “Whirlpool Organizing,” the processes of anti-imperial organizers’ relationship and coalition building are examined to demonstrate the liquidities that animate dialectics and differences. In “Anchored Relationality,” U.S. diasporic Filipino/a/x’ varied and complex reconnections with Philippine waters are explored to illustrate the fluidities of positions and relations. In “Archipelagic Performance,” the staged production of “What sounds do turtles make?” is analyzed to showcase the flows of a decolonial and relational mode of performance.
ContributorsLabador, Ma Angela San Luis (Author) / LeMaster, Loretta (Thesis advisor) / Kim, Heewon (Thesis advisor) / Leong, Karen (Committee member) / Hastings, Rachel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
ContributorsDavis, Tiffany Brock (Performer) / Hastings, Rachel (Performer) / Schreffler, Sarah (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2007-11-20
ContributorsHastings, Rachel (Performer) / Davis, Tiffany Brock (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2009-03-26
ContributorsHastings, Rachel (Performer) / Brock, Tiffany (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2007-11-08
ContributorsRussell, Timothy Wells (Conductor) / Inman, Laura (Conductor) / Hastings, Rachel (Performer) / O'Hara, Martha (Performer) / Simon, Mary (Performer) / University Symphony Orchestra (Performer) / Choral Union (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2009-12-06
ContributorsDavis, Tiffany Brock (Performer) / Doney, Shannon Wilson (Performer) / Hastings, Rachel (Performer) / Kleinman, Kaitlynn (Performer) / Limpert, Steven (Performer) / Lowry, Sherry (Performer) / Lynn, Jamie (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2008-04-14