Juana was a voracious reader in her early childhood, hiding in the hacienda chapel to read her grandfather’s books from the adjoining library. She composed her first poem when she was eight years old. By adolescence, she had comprehensively studied Greek logic, and was teaching Latin to young children at age 13. She also learned Nahuatl, an Aztec language spoken in Central Mexico, and wrote some short poems in that language.…
It is, first and foremost, important to address how subversive Sor Juana is, not only in her gratefulness to “Sor Filotea” for her entirely “unwarranted” and “unexpected” favor of reviewing Sor Juana’s opinion piece on old sermons, but also in her now allegedly trite but at the time very new and solid belief and argument that women, though believed to be feeble-minded and too simple for higher education, were equally as thirsty and yearning for knowledge as their male…
Based on the passage from The Miraculous Apparition of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the main word seemed to be “Her.” It was very interesting to go from reading a poem about a woman who was constantly being oppressed and silenced for her gender (“To a Gentleman of Peru”) to go on to read a story about a man being called to worship a woman. Despite the conflict between the Spanish and the Native Americans, both cultures had similarities regarding their physical traits as well as their treatment of women. At the time, women, in both the Spanish and Native American cultures, were not given then same respect as men. Women were called to be completely submissive to both God and their husbands, and they were discouraged to speak out in public much less hold leadership positions. However, by examining how the narrative describes her physical attributes, it shows that she unifies both the indigenous people and the Spaniards.…
Sor Juana ines de la cruz born on november 12, 1651. she was a mexican renowned for her phenomenal knowledge of the arts and science of her day. her devotion to scientific inquiry and her poetry is considered to be the first feminist. Sor Juana was known to be and intellectual child. It is documented that she knew how to read by 3 years of age. Legend advises that as a young girl, juana sought out her grandfather's library and read its entire 3,000 books. she left home when she was young. she replied in a convent because she said that it was her only option as the environment provided the necessary atmosphere in which she could continue her…
In the seventeenth century the lives and roles of women were severely limited. Formation of severe gender norms for gender identification were enforced. Most especially women were denied education. Despite limited access two women were able to overcome gender limitations when it came to education. Both went about it in different ways although they had similar origins. These women were Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz and Catalina de Erauso. These noblewomen became catholic nuns. One sought an education from of the church. The other attended a university, Sor Juana stayed a nun. Catalina defied gender norms, cross-dressed and left the convent. In this way Sor Juana did more to influence public opinion regulating patriarchy and the treatment of gender…
as one her monograph’s greatest strengths. Diaz avoids an over-reliance on single piece evidence and mentions an array of women in the three convents. Her first several chapters study the debate occurring in Mexico and abroad over the creation of indigenous convents. Diaz then moves into examining the genres of sources written by indigenous women and their confessors to demonstrates the methods in which native women utilized their ethnic identity to position themselves in their religious space.…
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz lived a life without fear regarding the social criticisms of her writing and she wrote to influence change regarding the educational stereotypes made by the men of her era. Sor Juana worked diligently to educate herself continuously throughout her life in order to reach a level of sophistication that no man could contest.…
This also allows her to become conscious of women roles in society and teaches her on how to express herself in these problems. And in today’s literature, she is known for being a stand out and…
Sor Juana challenges the convection that women cannot have the desire to covet knowledge. Throughout her life Sor Juana has reached for more and more knowledge despite the fact that the education she desired was exclusive to males. She taught her self to read and write using books as her teacher. Sor Juana challenged many conventions through her writing and how she became who she was. Since she was not an elite Spanish woman making her education unusual.…
Also, Cisneros, the author suggests that education offers a kind of freedom. A woman should not be fettered by a husband. “I could’ve been somebody, you know? Esperanza, you go to school. Study hard.…
Most people, in this world, have a passion deep down inside of them that lead them to achieve what they put their heart and mind to. Fulfilling that passion is the most satisfying feeling. Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz is a well-known extraordinary figure from the colonial period. She is a great example of persevering to get through many obstacles in her life. Sor Juana developed a desire for education at a very young age and was highly noticeable in all of her literature. In the seventeenth century, it was the intellectual midpoint of Spanish colonial America. During this time Mexico City was politically and religiously the center of New Spain; the terrains went from California to Central America. In Latin American history, the church and state…
As the Catholic Church continues to frown upon homosexuals, they continue to frown upon transsexuals to an even greater extent. They see it as even larger perversion of the (already perverted) homosexual lifestyle. At the risk of generalizing, I would argue that many transsexuals then find that they need someone or something that will not judge them and only treat them with the respect they need. La Santa Muerte helps to fill the void left by society in many North American transsexuals. With most people not liking what they do not understand or ca not explain, this makes transsexuals the perfect target for them and the Church. People cannot explain why there are transsexuals, they do not know how hard it is to be transsexual, and they…
“Words. I’m surrounded by thousands of words. Maybe millions. Cathedral. Mayonnaise. Pomegranate. Mississippi. Neapolitan. Hippopotamus. Silky Terrifying. Iridescent. Tickle. Sneeze. Wish. Worry.” (1) To me Melody is different then a lot of 5th graders. But it is in a good way. She is very selfless, a lot of kids her age are selfish they are very greedy and don’t appreciate what they have. Melody had to. For a long time, she was not able to talk so she just went with whatever happened and as long as it served the propose she was happy.…
For example, in her address to the US Women’s Convention, “A’n’t I a Woman”, Sojourner Truth fights against the axioms used to define “woman.” In her speech she addresses not only what men say women should have, but also what women are capable of and then, using herself as an example, points out that these are not definitions that fit. She calls out that despite the fact that “women need to be helped into carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place everywhere” (Truth 219), these have not been things that have been extended to her. She goes on to talk of how she can work and eat as much as any man and calls out the ideas that women are fragile, inept creatures. She is utilizing the logical structure of the times to point out a flaw in the structures that came about from that logic, among other things.…
Through the voice of Esperanza, the narrator in her book The House on Mango Street, Cisneros gives girls a way to speak up in self-defense. Choices for girls are not nearly as limited as they were a generation ago. Today we value education for girls and we believe that they should be given the same career opportunities as boys. In school girls are taught that they don’t have to be tied to the traditional roles that their mothers and grandmothers were limited to. But, we still find these limitations reflected in the ways boys and girls are raised in their homes and treated in society. Esperanza shows us a way to overcome these cultural barriers through her courage and determination. And her message of hope and overcoming obstacles is one that not only inspires girls in her audience, but boys as well.…