M. EVELINA GALANG: MEMORY, WITNESS, AND THE ARCHIVE OF FILIPINA SURVIVAL
By Alex S. Fabros, Jr.
M. Evelina Galang stands as one of the most vital Filipina American literary voices of the last three decades, shaping a body of work that bridges the intimate textures of girlhood, the shifting terrain of diaspora, and the unfinished histories of war. Her debut collection, Her Wild American Self (1996), arrived as a landmark within Asian American literature: a book that placed Filipina American girls and women at the center of their own stories, speaking in unruly, vulnerable, and fiercely honest voices. The strength of the collection lies in its refusal to explain or translate culture; Galang writes from the inside, relying on gesture, rhythm, and emotional truth rather than sociological framing. [1]
Born Harrisburg, PA, raised in the American Midwest, Galang’s early life between geographies shaped her understanding of silence, longing, and distance. The winter landscapes of her youth and the pressure to negotiate identity across multiple cultural fronts provided the conditions under which her storytelling sensibility took shape. [2]
After graduate training, she joined the University of Miami’s Creative Writing Program, where she developed a reputation for rigorous mentorship grounded in attention, precision, and community responsibility. [3]
Her debut established the foundation for her second major work, One Tribe (2006), which deepens her exploration of community, grief, and solidarity. The novel follows a Filipina American neighborhood in Virginia Beach in the wake of a tragedy, observing how silence, loyalty, and cultural memory shape the way families respond to loss. Galang writes with careful restraint, showing how parents improvise love and discipline, how teenagers navigate vulnerability and bravado, and how aunties carry the cultural labor of holding communities together. The novel’s strength is its understanding that community is not sentimental terrain, but a living system shaped by history, migration, and obligation. [5]
Her most far-reaching and historically significant work is Lolas’ House: Filipino Women Living with War (2017), the result of more than a decade of interviews, research, and community engagement with Filipina survivors of Japanese wartime sexual enslavement. Rather than treating their stories as historical artifacts, Galang frames the testimonies as living acts of witness. She spent years traveling to the Philippines, sitting with sixteen Lolas in their homes, listening as they recounted abduction, confinement, violence, hunger, and survival. [6]
What emerges in her writing is not only the record of their memories but the record of relationship — the trust built over repeated visits, the slow unfolding of details long kept hidden, and the intimacy of shared grief. Galang approaches the Lolas’ testimonies with a clear ethical stance: an interviewer cannot extract a story; she must earn it. Lolas’ House describes not only what the survivors told her, but how they chose to tell it — in kitchens, gardens, living rooms, always on their own terms. The book refuses voyeurism. Instead, it insists that the act of telling is an act of agency, especially for women whose lives were shaped by silence, shame, and decades of cultural taboos that discouraged disclosure. [7]
Postwar amnesia frames much of the difficulty surrounding the Lolas’ history, and Galang is one of the few Filipina American writers to interrogate how that forgetting became embedded in family life, national narrative, and formal education. She documents how survivors often stayed silent for decades, how stigma shaped their relationships with neighbors and relatives, and how Philippine society struggled to process their trauma within a culture that prized resilience over vulnerability. Lolas’ House treats memory not simply as testimony but as resistance. [6]
The connection between the past and the present becomes even clearer in her young adult novel, Angel de la Luna and the Fifth Glorious Mystery (2013), which follows a Filipina American teenager navigating family fracture, the lingering effects of martial law, and her own political awakening. Angel learns the histories left out of textbooks and unspoken in her own home, mirroring how many young Filipina Americans discover their families’ pasts only in fragments. The novel’s emotional force comes from its insistence that political realities shape personal identity, and that girlhood is often lived in the crossfire of intergenerational memory. [8]
Galang’s engagement with gendered violence extends beyond the comfort women archive and into questions of representation, power, and cultural visibility. Her editorial work on Screaming Monkeys: Critiques of Asian American Images (2003) gathers essays, poems, interviews, and criticism confronting how Asian Americans are distorted in U.S. media. The anthology’s stance is clear: misrepresentation is not merely aesthetic harm but a condition that shapes how communities are treated in public life. [9]
In curating voices across disciplines and generations, Galang demonstrates a commitment to collective critique and to expanding the public understanding of Asian American identities. Her ongoing teaching amplifies these commitments. Students frequently describe Galang’s workshops as places where craft and ethics cannot be separated: the integrity of a sentence depends on the integrity of its witness. [10] She encourages emerging writers—especially women and students of color—to trust the stories they carry, to revise with precision, and to recognize that writing is a civic practice as much as an artistic one. What ties Her Wild American Self, One Tribe, Angel de la Luna, Screaming Monkeys, and Lolas’ House together is an unwavering devotion to preserving stories that might otherwise be forgotten. She writes girls, families, and survivors into visibility, creating an archive that resists erasure and insists that Filipina lives—whether in Chicago, the Philippines, or Miami—belong at the center of literary conversation. Across her work, a single question echoes constantly: How do we carry histories that the world has tried to silence? Galang’s answer is equally constant: We bear witness. We speak. We listen. We refuse to forget. Her books form a vital part of Filipino American memory work, ensuring that the stories of survivors, daughters, migrants, and workers are recorded with dignity, clarity, and care.
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Endnotes
[1] Her Wild American Self, Coffee House Press, 1996.
[2] Interviews with the author, including Asian American Writers’ Workshop and NEA podcasts.
[3] University of Miami Creative Writing Program public materials.
[4] Reviews in Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal.
[5] One Tribe, Coffee House Press, 2006, and related reviews.
[6] Lolas’ House: Filipino Women Living with War, Curbstone Books/Northwestern University Press, 2017.
[7] Author interviews and notes regarding the process of documenting survivors’ stories. [8] Angel de la Luna and the Fifth Glorious Mystery, Candlewick Press, 2013.
[9] Screaming Monkeys: Critiques of Asian American Images, Coffee House Press, 2003.
[10] University of Miami student and faculty public statements.
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Alex S. Fabros, Jr. is a historian and writer specializing in Filipino American history and the multiracial communities of California’s Chinatowns. A former Marine and longtime educator, he has contributed to public-history projects, documentaries, and community archives focusing on Asian American labor, veterans’ history, and Pacific migrations. He writes across genres—social history, biography, and creative nonfiction—and advocates for intergenerational storytelling and community memory.

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