Biography of muslim rulers and rebels
This book tracks the In this first ground-level account of the Muslim separatist rebellion in the Philippines, Thomas McKenna challenges prevailing anthropological analyses of nationalism as well as their underlying assumptions about the interplay of culture and power.
Power, Contention and Identity Between
Muslim Rulers and Rebels: Everyday Politics and Armed Separatism in the Southern Philippines. By Thomas M. McKenna. Berkeley and London: University of California Press, xv, pp. (paper). - Volume 58 Issue 3.It surveys and discusses Chapter 5 America's Moros. In his work on early American colonial rule in the Muslim Philippines, Peter Gowing cites a passage from a report to General Tasker Bliss, the second governor of the "Moro Province": "I find that the Moros who attended the St. Louis Exposition bought and brought in, apparently without question, no less than fifty rifles and revolvers of the very latest.
Muslim rulers and rebels: everyday Philippines in order to establish an Islamic State" (MIM Manifesto quoted in Glang , ).A contemporaneous editorial in the Cotabato City newspaper (Mindanao Cross, June 1, ) noted the irony in the fact that Datu Udtug, the former governor of the province and prominent advocate of Muslim-Christian political harmony in the region, had now founded a Muslim secessionist movement.