"The author makes a compelling argument about the complex ways by which Greco-Roman culture, especially Latin, was a double edged sword: used by educated, upper class colonial subjects--both native and mestizo--to signal their deference to colonialism but also to carve out spaces of critique and resistance... In his careful excavation of Greco-Roman (and Egyptian) references in Rizal's work, he demonstrates the extent of nationalism's hybrid origins and its originary cosmopolitanism that gave it a powerful appeal. I know of no one with Zanker's erudition and command of multiple languages as well as a thorough grounding in both the classics and postcolonial theory who could've possibly undertaken this work. It is truly impressive." - Vicente L. Rafael, Professor of History, University of Washington