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Juana Inés de la Cruz
(redirected from Sor Juana)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.02 sec.
Juana Inés de la Cruz (hwä`nä ēnās` dā lä krs), 1651–95, Mexican poet. She is considered the greatest lyric poet of the colonial period. A beautiful and intellectually precocious girl, Juana was a favorite at the viceregal court before entering a Mexican convent at the age of 16. Forced to study outside the university, she devoted herself to amassing a fine library, and made her convent into a center of religious and social life in Mexico. Her classical erudition and her scientific curiosity led to reprimands from her superiors. The bishop of Puebla published one of her studies but—under the pseudonym of a fellow nun—criticized her for neglecting religious duties. Sor Juana answered these objections to the education of women in a spirited autobiographical letter (1691; tr. 1982) that became a classic. Her lyric poetry, mystical in inspiration and influenced by Spaniards Góngora and Calderón, won enduring fame. Her masterpiece is Primer sueño, a metaphoric interpretation of a dream and of awakening. Sor Juana sold her books and devoted her last years to the spiritual life. She died trying to help the convent victims of an epidemic.

Bibliography

See selected poems tr. by M. S. Peden (1985) and F. Warnke (1987); studies by O. Paz (tr. 1988) and G. Tavard (1991); critical essays ed. by S. Merrim (1991).



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The less known also delight and edify by their distinctive personal voice: Christine de Pisan and Sor Juana de la Cruz, relatively unknown to me; or Pope Leo XIII and Dorothy Sayers in unexpected and mutually enriching guise.
Velasquez takes inspiration from Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, the famous 17th-century Mexican nun and poet credited as being the first feminist in North America.
Through dance, Gallego's high school students learned about the lives and work of five notable Hispanic women including painter Frida Kahlo; Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, who became a nun in order to get an education; and Digna Ochoa, the human rights lawyer who was assassinated in 2001.
 
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