Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz Popular Books

Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz Biography & Facts

Juana Inés de Asbaje y Ramírez de Santillana, better known as Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (12 November 1648 – 17 April 1695), was a colonial Mexican writer, philosopher, composer and poet of the Baroque period, as well as a Hieronymite nun, nicknamed "The Tenth Muse" and "The Phoenix of America" by her contemporary critics. As a Spanish-criolla from the New Spain, she was among the main American-born contributors to the Spanish Golden Age, alongside Juan Ruiz de Alarcón and Garcilaso de la Vega "el Inca", and is presently considered one of the most important female authors in Spanish language literature and the literature of Mexico. Throughout history Sor Juana's significance to different communities has varied significantly, having been presented as a candidate for Catholic sainthood, a symbol of Mexican nationalism, freedom of speech, women's rights, sexual diversity, and others, making her a figure of great controversy and debate to this day. Life Early life Juana was born in San Miguel Nepantla (presently Nepantla de Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz) near Mexico City as the illegitimate daughter of Don Pedro Manuel de Asuaje y Vargas-Machuca, a Spanish navy captain from the Canary Islands involved in colonial transatlantic shipping and trade, and Doña Isabel Ramírez de Santillana y Rendón, a distinguished criolla, whose father leased the Hacienda de Panoaya, near Mexico City.There are two different baptism registrations that have been attributed to her, one under the name of "Juana" in 1648, and another one under the name of "Inés" in 1651, still a matter of academic research and debate. There is, nevertheless agreement that she was one of the three children that Doña Isabel Ramírez de Santillana had out of wedlock with Don Pedro de Asuaje. Despite having had an occasional contact with her father as a child, Sor Juana's infancy occurred entirely around her mother's family in the hacienda of Panaoya, in Amecameca, leased by her maternal grandfather, and home to the ample Ramírez de Santillana family. Among her relatives, several women with the name "Inés" have been noted, included her grandmother Inés de Brenes, her maternal-aunt Inés Ramírez de Santillana, and her first-cousin Inés de Brenes y Mendoza, married to a grandson of Antonio de Saavedra Guzmán, the first ever published American-born poet. Later described as child prodigy, Sor Juana was educated at home at the Hacienda de Papaya, becoming fluent in both Latin and Nahuatl, and learning philosophy, and mathematics. She was given free access to her grandfather's private library. During her childhood, Inés often hid in the hacienda chapel to read her grandfather's books from the adjoining library, something forbidden to girls. By the age of three, she had learned how to read and write Latin. By the age of five, she reportedly could do accounts. At age eight, she composed a poem on the Eucharist. By adolescence, Inés had mastered Greek logic, and at age thirteen she was teaching Latin to young children. She also learned the Aztec language of Nahuatl and wrote some short poems in that language. In 1664, at the age of 16, Inés was sent to live in Mexico City. She asked her mother's permission to disguise herself as a male student so that she could enter the university there, without success. Without the ability to obtain a formal education, Juana continued her studies privately. Her family's influential position had gained her the position of lady-in-waiting at the colonial viceroy's court, where she came under the tutelage of the Vicereine Donna Eleonora del Carretto, a member of one of Italy's most prominent families, and wife of the Viceroy of New Spain Don Antonio Sebastián de Toledo, Marquis of Mancera. The viceroy Marquis de Mancera, wishing to test the learning and intelligence of the 17-year-old, invited several theologians, jurists, philosophers, and poets to a meeting, during which she had to answer many questions unprepared and explain several difficult points on various scientific and literary subjects. The manner in which she acquitted herself astonished all present and greatly increased her reputation. Her literary accomplishments garnered her fame throughout New Spain. She was much admired in the viceregal court, and she received several proposals of marriage, which she declined. After joining a nunnery in 1667, Sor Juana began writing poetry and prose dealing with such topics as love, environmentalism, feminism, and religion. She turned her nun's quarters into a salon, visited by New Spain's female intellectual elite, including Doña Eleonora del Carreto, Marchioness of Mancera, and Doña Maria Luisa Gonzaga, Countess of Paredes de Nava, both Vicereines of the New Spain, among others. Her criticism of misogyny and the hypocrisy of men led to her condemnation by the Bishop of Puebla, and in 1694 she was forced to sell her collection of books and focus on charity towards the poor. She died the next year, having caught the plague while treating her sisters. Religious life and name change In 1667, she entered the Monastery of St. Joseph, a community of the Discalced Carmelite nuns, as a postulant, where she remained but a few months. Later, in 1669, she entered the monastery of the Hieronymite nuns, which had more relaxed rules, where she changed her name to Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, probably in reference to Sor Juana de la Cruz Vázquez Gutiérrez who was a Spanish nun whose intellectual accomplishments earned her one of the few dispensations for women to preach the gospel. Another potential namesake was Saint Juan de la Cruz, one of the most accomplished authors of the Spanish Baroque. She chose to become a nun so that she could study as she wished since she wanted "to have no fixed occupation which might curtail my freedom to study." In the convent and perhaps earlier, Sor Juana became intimate friends with Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora, who visited her in the convent's locutorio. She stayed cloistered in the Convent of Santa Paula of the Hieronymite in Mexico City from 1669 until her death in 1695, and there she studied, wrote, and collected a large library of books. The Viceroy and Vicereine of New Spain became her patrons; they supported her and had her writings published in Spain. She addressed some of her poems to paintings of her friend and patron María Luisa Manrique de Lara y Gonzaga, daughter of Vespasiano Gonzaga, Duca di Guastala, Luzara e Rechiolo and Inés María Manrique, 9th Countess de Paredes, which she also addressed as Lísida. In November 1690, the bishop of Puebla, Manuel Fernández de Santa Cruz published, under the pseudonym of Sor Filotea, and without her permission, Sor Juana's critique of a 40-year-old sermon by Father António Vieira, a Portuguese Jesuit preacher. Although Sor Juana's intentions for the work, called Carta Atenagórica are left to interpretation, many scholars have opted to interpret the work as a challenge to the hierarchical structure of the Catholic Chu.... Discover the Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz books.

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  • La felicidad de los perros del terremoto synopsis, comments

    La felicidad de los perros del terremoto

    Gabriel Rodríguez Liceaga

    «Chesterton postulaba que un novelista debe tener voz propia, agudeza, humor y compasión. Gabriel Rodríguez Liceaga acopia, en esta novela, un arsenal de todo ello.» Antonio Ortuño...

  • The Tenth Muse synopsis, comments

    The Tenth Muse

    Fanchon Royer

    In this wellrounded study, which was first published in 1952, author Fanchón Royer vividly presents Sor Juana Inés De La Cruz (16481695), a seventeenthcentury Hieronymite nun of Ne...

  • Ontologia De La Metafora En El Divino Narciso De Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz. synopsis, comments

    Ontologia De La Metafora En El Divino Narciso De Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz.

    Romance Notes

    En la edicion de las Obras completas de Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, Alfonso Mendez Platicarte proclama que la Eco de Sor Juana, junto con el Divino Narciso, ya que sucesores de, ent...

  • Los indecibles pecados de Sor Juana synopsis, comments

    Los indecibles pecados de Sor Juana

    Kyra Galván

    ¿Qué ocultan los diarios de una monja del siglo XVII?Laura descubre por casualidad los diarios de una monja jerónima del siglo XVII, en el Archivo General de Indias, en Sevilla. Es...

  • De somno et insomniis synopsis, comments

    De somno et insomniis

    María Angélica González Dávila & María Cristina Ríos Espinosa

    Este libro tiene como finalidad dejar un registro de obra y de los textos que surgieron con motivo de la intervención in situ que hice a la Celda de Sor Juana en abril de 2017. La ...

  • Cartas de Lysi synopsis, comments

    Cartas de Lysi

    Hortensia Calvo & Beatriz Colombi

    La publicación de Cartas de Lysi. La mecenas de sor Juana Inés de la Cruz en correspondencia inédita (Iberoamericana, 2015) dio a conocer el hallazgo, en la Latin American Library ...

  • Finjamos que soy feliz synopsis, comments

    Finjamos que soy feliz

    Mónica Lavín

    Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz es más que una escritora, es uno de los personajes centrales de la cultura mexicana. ¿No la vemos con frecuencia al abrir la billetera? Cuando ella vivió,...

  • The Angel of Galilea synopsis, comments

    The Angel of Galilea

    Laura Restrepo & Dolores M. Koch

    "This barrio angel teaches us how to see behind the appearance of things and how to embrace reality with all the senses." Isabel Allende"Laura Restrepo breathes life into a singula...

  • Hearing Voices synopsis, comments

    Hearing Voices

    Sarah Finley

    Hearing Voices takes a fresh look at sound in the poetry and prose of colonial Latin American poet and nun Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (1648/51–95). A voracious autodidact,...

  • Cartas de Lysi synopsis, comments

    Cartas de Lysi

    Hortensia Calvo

    Cartas de Lysi reúne dos cartas autógrafas de María Luisa Manrique de Lara y Gonzaga, XI condesa de Paredes y marquesa de la Laguna; la reconocida musa y mecenas de sor Juana Inés ...

  • La contingencia synopsis, comments

    La contingencia

    Alicia Genovese

    "Se las lee como si se escuchara una voz en el silencio más blanco: lo que dicen las palabras de los poemas de Alicia Genovese se hace necesario, inevitable como una naturaleza...

  • Al amor de Sor Juana synopsis, comments

    Al amor de Sor Juana

    Alejandro Soriano Vallès

    En 2010 y 2011 Alejandro Soriano Vallés dio a conocer al mundo documentos probatorios de la fidelidad con que los primeros biógrafos de Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz relataron su vida....

  • Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz synopsis, comments

    Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz

    D. José de Jesus Cuevas

    Temas concretos tomados de la vida humilde de Sor Juana. Unas sonetas presente en homenaje a la memoria la admirada poeta.

  • Amigos de sor Juana synopsis, comments

    Amigos de sor Juana

    Guillermo Schmidhuber de la Mora

    El autor nos presenta seis rigurosos estudios sobre igual número de personajes que influyeron notablemente en la vida de sor Juana, aunque de diversa manera; mientras unos la alent...

  • Ingenio y feminidad synopsis, comments

    Ingenio y feminidad

    Barbara Ventarola

    El volumen reúne ensayos que se acercan a la obra sorjuanina desde un prisma analítico específico, el de la relación entre ingenio y feminidad. Desde la antigüedad, dicha relación ...

  • Born Reading synopsis, comments

    Born Reading

    Kathleen Krull & Virginia Loh-Hagan

    Once books kickstart their brains, girls change history. Discover the foundation of reading that empowered some of the world’s most influential women in this informative and inspir...