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Bisaya Magasin is a weekly Cebuano magazine now published by the Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation, Philippines. It has the record of being the oldest magazine in Cebuano which is still published, and "the most successful periodical in Cebuano" (CCP, p. 542).
The first of two-volume folk epic entitled "Kalisub", considered the first epic written in Cebuano language, that he authored was serialized in Bisaya magazine. [1] His works appeared in various publications such as Alimyon, Bag-ong Suga, Focus Philippines, Graphic, Philippines Free Press ,Sands & Corrals, Sun Star Weekend, and Women's Journal.
He edited several Cebuano periodicals. He was the editor of Lamdag (Light) in 1947, associate editor of Bulak (Flower) in 1948, literary section editor of Republic Daily from 1948 until 1952, and editor of Bag-ong Suga (New Light) from 1963 to 1967. [1] From 1938 to 1941, he was the literary editor of Bisaya magazine. [1]
Cebuano literature includes both the oral and written literary forms Cebuano of colonial, pre-colonial and post-colonial Philippines. While the majority of Cebuano writers are from the Visayas and Mindanao region, the best-known literary outlets for them, including the Bisaya Magasin, are based in Makati in Metro Manila. There is also a lively ...
Natalio Bacus Bacalso (December 1, 1908 – March 30, 1984) was a Filipino writer, newspaperman, radio broadcaster, filmmaker, Constitutional Convention delegate in 1971 representing Cebu's 2nd district, and opposition assemblyman to the Interim Batasang Pambansa in 1978.
The oldest reliable glimpse of Cebuano's grammar and vocabulary was from Domingo Ezguerra's Arte de la Lengua Bisaya de la Provincia de Leyte, a Waray grammar book written in 1663. The first dedicated grammar book for Cebuano, Francisco Encina's Arte de la Lengua Zebuana, was compiled in 1801 (40 years after his death). [1]
She began writing at an early age. Her career took off after World War II when her short stories and serialized novels were published in Bisaya magazine. Montaire and Austregelina Espina-Moore were the only Cebuano female novelists during that time period. [2] Her novel Ikaduhang Sugo [3] was published by E. Q. Cornejo and Sons in 1971.
The transition to Cebuano was driven by nationalistic sentiment prevalent in those times. [5] In its heyday, Bag-ong Kusog was the leading periodical with a circulation of 7,000, [2] considered high at that time. It was the most successful regional periodical excluding the Manila-printed issues by Liwayway Publications. [6]