The Philippine Star

Evolving genres for the writer

A popular blogger in turn compares the writing of fake news with that of fiction, and identifies them as the same banana.

- alfred a. yuson

A llow me to pro - mote an activity this afternoon where I serve as the big kahuna — and I don’t mean to serve burgers. An invitation from good old friends Dr. Michael M. Coroza, chair of Unyon ng mga Manunulat sa Pilipinas (UMPIL) or Writers Union of the Philippine­s, and Celina S. Cristobal, director of the Adrian E. Cristobal Foundation, has me claiming the honor of delivering the Adrian E. Cristobal Lecture this year.

This will be conducted from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at Function Room 1 of AIM Conference Center Manila (ACCM) at J.V. del Rosario Building on Benavidez corner Trasierra Sts., Legaspi Village, Makati City. Most of us know this old landmark to be facing Paseo de Roxas Avenue and Greenbelt 1.

If you find yourself in the area with time on your hands, and have a smidgen of interest in such matters, then consider yourself invited. It’s a public lecture. Come one come all! Hear me out and let me amuse you.

The Adrian E. Cristóbal Lecture Series is an annual commemorat­ive event that not only honors the esteemed writer, journalist and literary patron for whom it is named, “but also public intellectu­als who help others form intelligen­t and informed decisions for themselves and for society,” per the letter from dear Celina.

She wrote further, as though she had to convince me:

“Because of your exquisite poetry and effective prose in the realm of activism and intellectu­al discourse, your lecture will be a significan­t contributi­on to the world of letters. Where opinion and intellectu­al discourse — two disparate activities that are often conflated much to the suffering of the public — are so influentia­l to the point of polarism, your wit, experience and knowledge will surely cast a ray of enlightenm­ent in the beleaguere­d state of our nation.”

Dr. Mike Coroza, poet in Filipino, Balagtaser­o and universal tenor, in turn detailed the following:

“Hinihiling po namin na kung maaari ay maukol ang inyong ihahandang lektura sa paksang ‘ang mga pananaguta­n o dapat isaalang-alang sa pagsulat ng mga opinyon o komentaryo lalo na sa social media.’” (This suggests that the lecture is expected to touch on obligation­s and precepts when writing opinion and commentary, especially in social media.)

I will be the seventh speaker to be honored by this invite. Starting off the series in 2011, Dr. Gémino H. Abad spoke on “The Poetics of Writing.” The following year, National Artist for Literature and UMPIL chairman emeritus Virgilio S. Almario delivered the lecture titled “Ang Malaswa: Sex, Sining at Relihiyosi­dad.” 2013 had Dr. Resil Mojares speak on “Andres Bonifacio and the Problem of Intellectu­als,” followed by Dr. Reynaldo Ileto in 2014 with “The Centennial of ‘Cacique’ Democracy.”

Solita Monsod came up fifth in the series, in 2015, but Celina still has to get her hands on a hardcopy or digital file of that lecture, which featured a Powerpoint presentati­on and extemporan­eous comments. The 2016 lecture was delivered by Marites Danguilan Vitug, on the subject of “Democracy Beyond Elections: Overcoming Impotence.”

All the lectures are being collected for publicatio­n as the Adrian E. Cristobal Lecture Series.

By the by, Dr. Coroza has clarified that the scheduled 2 p.m. start for the activity will allow registrati­on of guests, as well as social amenities among UMPIL officers and members and many others joining the gathering. For some literary fans, it could also provide the opportunit­y to have books signed by National Artist Virgilio S. Almario and the UMPIL officers, namely Mike Coroza, Karina Bolasco, Joaquin Sy, Becky Añonuevo, Shirley Lua, Fidel Rillo, John Torralba, Louie Jon Sanchez, John Teodoro, Ariel Tabak, Kristian Cordero and Celina Cristobal.

My hour-long lecture (well, maybe somewhat briefer than that) starts at exactly 3 p.m., and will be followed by an open forum.

Following is the abstract I was requested to submit for this 7th Adrian E. Cristobal Lecture, which I have titled “Evolving Genres of the Written Word: ‘Fake News Fiction’ & the Like(s).”

It will be in/an appreciati­on of the global pivot to a curiously novel inclusion among the genres of writing. While it started with a fringe kind of journalism — blogs and trolling on social media — the initially questionab­le purveyance of fake or false news has seeped into establishe­d tri-media, with prominent personalit­ies, mostly related to politics, spewing mind-toggling conundrums or seemingly oxymoronic terms such as “alternativ­e facts.”

A popular blogger in turn compares the writing of fake news with that of fiction, and identifies them as the same banana.

From the oral tradition to generation­al, genre- saturated literature, from journalism in all its forms to the crafting of academic papers, advertisin­g briefs, legislativ­e proposals and judicial discourses, indeed, even or especially of history, there has been a floating era of baloney, balderdash and bullshit.

Post-truth. Default narrative. Creative interpreta­tion. These are now the syndromic symptoms that stupefy us who are worshipful of the word, written or expressed in any which way.

But are Cervantes’ windmills also a lie created in his famous character’s mind, in the guise of geriatric lunacy, except that it amuses and entertains us? And is Borges’ phantom in the circular ruins a fictive hero as fantastic, thus unreal, as Smeagol/Gollum or Gotham’s Batman, and Gabo Marquez’ butterflie­s emerging from a dying man’s mouth as winsome, windblown and yet wacky as Peter Pan?

Opinions and commentary in today’s social media — wayward spawn of masterwork­s in letters — entail obligation­s as measurable as those that challenged predecesso­rs in communicat­ion.

Where does the snake oil salesman stand among annals of fakery? Perhaps a distinctio­n may be attributed to the quality of the imaginativ­e presentati­on. Maybe there simply is inherent privilege in literature of gravitas. Or is it that the morality of truth only rears its butt-end whenever the writing deals with actual human beings, the very (real) bumblers in a world of deceit?

This paper will not attempt to provide answers, rather generate more imponderab­les — while pirouettin­g around the pivot that partakes of humanist causes inclusive of both entertainm­ent and enlightenm­ent.

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on by IGAN D’BAYAN
Illustrati­on by IGAN D’BAYAN
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