Skip to main content

Posts

Featured

Catalogs of Suspicion: Occupation, Evidence, and the Politics of Being Seen

Catalogs of Suspicion: Occupation, Evidence, and the Politics of Being Seen Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ May 6, 2026 Occupational biographies (clerks, lawyers, teachers, librarians) illuminate how literacy, institutional access, and networks can enable political mobilization, but they are not forensic proof of insurgency; the killing of Filipino botanist Leonard Co in Kananga, Leyte on 15 November 2010 exemplifies how scientific fieldwork can be misread as combatant activity absent corroborating evidence, and the long legal aftermath underscores the dangers of occupational stereotyping in conflict zones.  Curatorial frame and conclusion The curatorial task here is to treat occupation as a semiotic object: a sign that carries skills, social position, and access, not a verdict of political identity. Revolutionary biographies often foreground early professions—Lenin's legal training, Mao's pedagogical work, Fidel Castro's law studies, Stalin's clerical years—to explain capaciti...

Latest Posts

House Impeachment Strategy Despite Senate Odds