Veronica Ramirez
Before Feminism: Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz is a writer I had not encountered
before in my studies in Literature. The scope of topics that Sor Juana addresses
and the variety of techniques she uses, such as music, poetry, and prose, are
impressive for any artist, but they seem astounding for a self-educated
seventeenth-century Mexican nun. This research post expands my class
presentation on Sor Juana, mainly because I still had so many questions and a
certain draw toward Sor Juana. How does a self-educated Mexican nun born in 1648
become an icon for women and why does Sor Juana have such a pull on modern
readers?
If a reader wanted to begin researching Sor Juana, I would
recommend looking at Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz: Religion, Art, and Feminism
by Pamela Kirk. This book presents Sor Juana’s personal life and focuses on
her religious life and her religious works.
To
get a larger picture of Sor Juana’s works, and to study the actual works, one of
the most impressive online repositories is Dartmouth’s “The Sor Juana Ines de la
Cruz Project,” which includes
a large number of Sor Juana’s plays, poetry and prose.
Even with her modern message, most of the online research
tends to impress upon the researcher that the
teaching of Sor Juana in America is more recent,
or at least gaining more steam in early American Literature during the last ten
years.
Sor Juana's works are not just studied as texts, but Sor
Juana herself is studied and even used as a Mexican archetype by Emily Hind in
her book Femmenism and the Mexican Woman Intellectual from Sor Juana to
Poniatowksa. The Sor Juana archetype is
a "woman intellectual... a smart, gendered but sexually inactive woman who
pursues knowledge and procreates only through art and not through genetic
legacy" (Hind 34).
The fact that Sor Juana is seen as an archetype
along with the Virgen de Guadalupe and La Malinche shows the importance of Sor
Juana in Mexican Literature. If you want to look at Sor Juana in a larger scope
than Mexican culture, in “Sor Juana’s ‘Silencio Sonoro’: Musical Responses to
her Poetry” Emily Bergmann looks at current music about Sor Juana or influenced
by Sor Juana, and also introduces a movie called I, the Worst of All by
director Maria Luisa Bemberg in 1990.
Bergmann
also states that two English novels by "Alicia Gaspar de Alba (Sor Juana’s
Second Dream) and Paul Anderson (Hunger’s Brides and Breath of
Heaven) have drawn upon extensive research to locate the poet’s embodied
experience, imagination, and desire in the geography and politics of colonial
New Spain” (Bergmann 180). Sor Juana’s influence reaches beyond poetry and
prose, and beyond the seventeenth century and into music and film in the twenty
first century.
The reason why Sor Juana is relevant to modern readers is
because her subjects are so modern and her reactions to her status of being a
woman were so public. As part of this research post, I came upon a theory about
Sor Juana’s sexual orientation, that she was a lesbian or had lesbian
tendencies. At first, I thought it was all general speculation over her decision
to go into a convent and her relationship with her patroness
but
I encountered several poems, websites, and even a movie that support this
theory.
One website, "Isle of Lesbos" captured a handful of Sor
Juana's poems that seemed to have tinges of Lesbian verses or ideas. This idea,
whether founded or not, is interesting because of the modern relevance and the
modern attachment to readers have given to a seventeenth-century nun.
If I were to continue researching Sor Juana Ines de la
Cruz, I would like to explore more of the impact that she has on current
literature, music and films. I am definitely going to watch the film I, the
Worst of All because I would like to see how a modern director portrays Sor
Juana. Sor Juana focuses on modern and progressive issues that are still
relevant today, such as equality, women's education, and especially men's view
of women. Resources:
Bergmann, Emilie. “Sor Juana’s ‘Silencio
Sonoro:’ Musical Responses to her Poetry.”
Cuad Musica Artes
Visuales Artes Escenicas 4.1(2008): 177-206. Hind, Emily.
Femmenism and the Mexican Woman Intellectual from Sor Juana to Poniatowska.
New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010. Print. Kirk, Pamela.
Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz: Religion, Art,
and Feminism. New York: Continuum, 1999.
Print.
http://www.mezzocammin.com/timeline/timeline.php?vol=timeline&iss=1600&cat=40&page=cruz
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/j_ines.html
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