-inspired by Rizal’s passion for education and enlightenment, a collection of works, insights, and references inspired by José Rizal's legacy—empowering minds with knowledge, critical thinking, and a deeper understanding of society.
Learn MoreJosé Rizal's Noli Me Tangere, written in Spanish and published in 1887, was an important work in Philippine political history.
Read MoreThe world's greatest study guide to Noli Me Tangere, from the authors of SparkNotes. Get summaries, analysis, and quotations you require.
Read MoreThe Social Cancer is a comprehensive and impassioned examination of the cruelty and corruption of Spanish authority in the Philippines.
Read MoreJosé Rizal; translated by Soledad Lacson-Locsin. Noli Me Tangere is Latin meaning "touch me not." In this modern classic of Filipino literature, José Rizal exposes "matters. . . so delicate that no one can touch them," unveiling an epic history of the Philippines that became the country's most significant political book in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Read MoreIn José Rizal's Noli Me Tángere, Don Crisóstomo Ibarra, a Filipino of Spanish origin, returns to the Philippines after seven years in Europe and becomes aware of the repressive Spanish colonial authority.
Read MoreIt provides a critical commentary on the social and political concerns confronting the Filipino people during the Spanish colonial period.
Read MoreOriginally written by Rizal in Spanish, the book has since been more commonly published and read in the Philippines in either Tagalog (the major indigenous language), or English. The Rizal Law requires Noli, published in 1887, and its 1891 sequel, El filibusterismo, to be read by all high school students throughout the country.
Read MoreStep into the world of José Rizal’s masterpiece, Noli Me Tangere, where each character tells a story of love, sacrifice, hope, and revolution.
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