M. Evelina Galang Explained

M. Evelina Galang
Birth Date:20 April 1961
Birth Place:Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.

M. Evelina Galang (born Harrisburg, PA in 1961) is an American novelist, short story writer, editor, essayist, educator, and activist of Filipina descent.[1] Her novel One Tribe won the AWP Novel of the Year Prize in 2004.[2]

Biography

Maria Evelina Galang, the eldest of six children, was the first American-born member of her family.

Her father, Miguel T. Galang, a physician, and mother, Gloria Lopez-Tan Galang, met in the United States while she was earning a master's degree in English at Marquette University, and he was in residency at a local hospital. After returning to live in the Philippines when Galang was one year old, the family immigrated permanently to the United States to avoid the coming Marcos dictatorship. The family lived in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Baltimore, Saskatchewan, and Peoria before settling in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, when Galang was ten.[3]

Galang earned a degree in radio, TV, and film at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1983. She briefly worked at an NBC affiliate in Madison, Wisconsin, as a producer and on-air arts/entertainment reporter. Relocating to Chicago, she forged a 20-year career as a script and continuity supervisor in TV commercial production.

Over the same period, Galang pursued an MFA in creative writing at Colorado State University, completing her degree in 1994. After teaching creative writing at Old Dominion University, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Iowa State University, Galang received a 2002 Fulbright Research Fellowship, allowing her to spend eight months in the Philippines researching the stories of surviving comfort women.[4]

Upon her return to the United States, Galang joined the Creative Writing Program at the University of Miami, where she is a professor of English. She became director of the program in 2009.[5]

Books

Galang's writing explores the experiences of Filipino immigrants and first-generation Filipino Americans. “M. Evelina Galang's work spans generations with her writing of young Filipina-Americans and the surviving World War II ‘comfort women.’”[6]

Her Wild American Self, written as Galang's MFA thesis, was published to acclaim in 1996. The New York Times Book Review praised the story collection for its "elegant, mesmerizing style," and said, "the brief, chant like monologues that frame the collection are as lyrical as prayers."[7] It was named a Times Notable Book.

In 2003 Galang edited Screaming Monkeys: A Critique of Asian American Images, an anthology of essays, poetry, illustrations, advertising, and pictures. It won ForeWord Magazine's Gold Book of the Year Award for 2003, as well as the Gustavus Meyers Outstanding Book Award in the Advancement of Human Rights for 2003.[8]

One Tribe, Galang's first novel, won the AWP Series for the Novel Award in 2004, while still in manuscript. Set in the Filipino-American community of Norfolk, Va., it was published by New Issues Press in 2006. It won the 2007 Global Filipino Literary Award for Fiction.[9]

Galang's second novel, Angel de la Luna and the 5th Glorious Mystery (2013), marketed to Young Adult readers, was nominated for the 2014 Teen Choice Award,[10] named a Young People Against the World book recommendation by the Northwest Asian Weekly,[11] and it was selected for the American Library Association's Amelia Bloomer Project Recommended Feminist Literature List `from Birth through 18.[12]

Pinayism, activism, and the comfort women

Galang is a leading advocate of Pinayism, a form of feminism rooted in the Filipina-American experience.[13]

Since 1998, Galang has been researching the lives of the women of Liga ng mga Lolang Pilipina (LILA Pilipina), a group surviving Filipina “comfort women,” forced into sex camps by the Japanese army, who came forward to make their stories public.[14]

She was the outreach coordinator of the 121 Coalition, lobbying for passage of House Resolution 121, which called on the Japanese government to publicly apologize to former comfort women in Korea, the Philippines, and elsewhere. The United States Congress House passed Resolution 121 on July 30, 2007.[15]

Galang supports the development of emerging minority writers. She teaches in the two-week summer workshop of Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation (VONA), a multi-genre workshop taught by established writers of color such as co-founders Junot Diaz and Elmaz Abinader, as well Chris Abani, Stacyann Chin, and others.[16] She also serves on the VONA board of directors.

Galang advocates multilingual fiction, that is, writing that combines English with the characters’ heritage language, without translation.[17]

Her activism has brought Galang invitations to the White House in 2013 and 2012 for briefings on Asian American and Filipino American affairs, to the State Department for lunch with Hillary Clinton and President Benigno Aquino of the Philippines in 2012.[18]

In 2014 Galang was named one of the “100 Most Influential Filipinas in the World” by the Filipina Women's Network (FWN), for her public activism, and her behind-the-scenes work as an activist, educator and administrator.[19]

Awards

Works

Fiction

Selected short fiction

Nonfiction

Edited Collections

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Galang. M. Evelina. Author Bio, professional web page.
  2. Web site: Shin Yu Pai. An Interview with Evelina Galang. 9 November 2014.
  3. Web site: Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation, board of directors' biographies. 9 November 2014.
  4. Web site: Galang. M. Evelina. Author Bio, professional web page.
  5. Web site: Shin Yu Pai. An Interview with Evelina Galang.
  6. Web site: National Endowment for the Arts podcast. 14 March 2013 . 9 November 2014.
  7. News: Frucht. Abby. A Long Way From Manila. The New York Times Book Review. May 12, 1996.
  8. Philippine Studies. 52. 4. 563–565.
  9. Web site: Association of Writers and Writing Programs. December 1, 2007.
  10. Web site: Teen Choice Book of the Year Nominees. teenreads.com.
  11. Pak. Samantha. Young People Against the World Book Recommendations. Northwest Asian Weekly. 32. 46.
  12. Web site: e-Veritas Magazine.
  13. Web site: Galang. M. Evelina. Evelina Galang's Shout Out and Her Message/Response to Pinayism. YouTube.
  14. Isel Kintanar Garcia. Comforting Women. Expat Pinoy Travel and Lifestyle Magazine. 2009. 3. 3. 86–87.
  15. Web site: Friends of Lolas.
  16. Web site: Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation website.
  17. Web site: Galang. M. Evelina. "In Context (Or, Why There is No Glossary)," afterward from the novel Angel de la Luna and the 5th Glorious Mystery..
  18. Web site: Galang. M. Evelina. My Lunch with Hillary Clinton.
  19. Web site: Filipina Women's Network, Disrupt 2014: Filipina Leadership Summit..
  20. Web site: Nominate Your Favorite Books of 2013 | Teenreads . 2014-11-09 . 2014-11-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141113193158/http://www.teenreads.com/features/teen-choice-book-of-the-year/nominate-your-favorite-books-of-2013 . dead .