John "Jack" Norbert Schumacher (born June 17, 1927 – May 14, 2014) was a FilipinoJesuit historian and educator known for his work exploring the Catholic clergy's role in the 1896 Philippine revolution in Revolutionary Clergy: The Filipino Clergy and the Nationalist Movement, 1850–1903, first published in 1981.[1][2][3][4]
Schumacher was born in Buffalo, New York. He became a naturalized Filipino citizen in 1977.[1]
His body of work includes The Propaganda Movement, 1880–1895: The Creation of a Filipino Consciousness, the Making of the Revolution (1973); Making of a Nation: Essays on Nineteenth-Century Nationalism (1991); Father Jose Burgos: A Documentary History (1999); and Growth and Decline: Essays on Philippine Church History (2009).[2][5][6][7]
^Veric, Charlie Samuya (2020). "Introduction: Reconstruction and Reckoning: Entanglements of Filipino Postcolonial Thought". Children of the Postcolony: Filipino Intellectuals and Decolonization, 1946-1972. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press.