Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (1648-1695) was a poet, dramatist, scholar, and nun of colonial New Spain, widely regarded as the finest writer of the Spanish Baroque in the Americas. She was born Juana Ramírez de Asbaje in San Miguel Nepantla, a village near Mexico City, the illegitimate daughter of a Spanish captain and a Creole woman of Spanish descent. She taught herself to read at the age of three, devoured the books in her grandfather's library, and begged her mother to let her dress as a boy so she could attend university — which was closed to women. At sixteen she became a lady-in-waiting at the viceregal court of New Spain, where she astonished scholars with her learning. Rather than marry, she entered a convent in 1669, first the Carmelites and then the Hieronymites, where she could continue her studies and writing. Her cell became one of the great intellectual centres of the Americas, filled with books, musical and scientific instruments, and a stream of visitors. She wrote love poetry, religious verse, philosophical essays, plays, and comic dramas in Spanish, Latin, Nahuatl, and the Afro-Mexican creole of her time. In the early 1690s, church authorities pressured her to abandon secular studies. She signed a statement of submission in her own blood, sold her library of some four thousand books, and died in 1695 while nursing her sisters through an epidemic.
Sor Juana matters because she produced a body of work of extraordinary intellectual and literary range within a colonial religious society that was hostile to women's learning, and because she wrote one of the clearest defences of women's right to knowledge in any language. In her Reply to Sister Philothea, written in 1691 in response to a bishop who had rebuked her for studying secular subjects, she laid out a rigorous argument: women have the same intellectual capacities as men, Scripture and tradition provide many examples of learned women, and the study of the world is not opposed to the service of God but part of it. The Reply is one of the foundational texts of Latin American literature and one of the earliest systematic feminist essays written anywhere in the Americas. Beyond the Reply, her poetry includes some of the finest lyric verse in the Spanish language, her philosophical poem Primero Sueño stages an ambitious journey of the intellect through the whole of creation, and her dramatic works engaged with philosophy, theology, and the experiences of the Indigenous and African populations of New Spain. She remains a central figure in Mexican and global literary and philosophical heritage.
The Poems, Protest, and a Dream selection translated by Margaret Sayers Peden (1997, Penguin) offers a generous English-language entry to her work, including the Reply.
Octavio Paz's Sor Juana (1988, Harvard University Press), by the Mexican Nobel laureate, is a readable and important study. The entry on Sor Juana in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy provides a reliable free introduction.
Emilie Bergmann and Stacey Schlau's Approaches to Teaching the Works of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (2007, Modern Language Association) is a useful scholarly guide. Electa Arenal and Amanda Powell's edition of the Reply (2009, Feminist Press) provides the text with careful annotation. Margo Glantz's Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz: hagiografía o autobiografía? (1995, Grijalbo, in Spanish) is a foundational feminist reading. The Obras Completas (Fondo de Cultura Económica, four volumes) is the standard Spanish edition.
Sor Juana entered the convent because she had a strong religious calling.
Sor Juana was quite open about her reasons, at least in retrospect. In the Reply she explained that she entered the convent because it was the only path available to her that did not require marriage and that allowed her to continue her studies. She respected religious life, took her vows seriously, and wrote extensive religious poetry, but she was clear that the main attraction was the opportunity to go on learning. Reading her vocation as primarily a love of knowledge, rather than a religious calling in the usual sense, is truer to what she herself said.
Sor Juana was a secular feminist hidden within a religious disguise.
This reading anachronistically imposes later categories on her work. Sor Juana was a genuinely religious thinker who wrote within the Catholic tradition of her time, and her arguments for women's learning were developed in religious terms: women have the same souls, the same intellectual capacities given by God, the same duty to love the Creator through understanding creation. Separating her religion from her defence of women's learning would misunderstand both. She was a religious thinker who made feminist arguments, which is not the same as a feminist disguised as a religious thinker.
The Reply to Sister Philothea was published during Sor Juana's lifetime as a public intervention.
The Reply was written in 1691 and circulated in manuscript but was not printed until 1700, five years after Sor Juana's death. During her lifetime it reached a select audience of readers in New Spain and Spain. The restricted circulation was itself significant: Sor Juana could not publish freely, and her writing had to find its readers through the networks of the church and the court. The Reply's status as a foundational text of feminist thought emerged over centuries as it was rediscovered, translated, and championed, rather than as an immediate public impact in her own time.
Sor Juana's work was forgotten until recently rediscovered by feminist scholars.
Sor Juana was never forgotten. Her poetry was published in Spain in her lifetime and reprinted through the eighteenth century. She remained a revered figure in Mexican and Hispanic literary tradition, celebrated as one of the greatest writers of the Spanish language. What changed in the twentieth century, particularly through the work of Octavio Paz and feminist scholars such as Emilie Bergmann and Margo Glantz, was the scholarly and philosophical interpretation of her work. Feminist scholarship brought out dimensions that earlier readers had overlooked, but it did not rescue her from oblivion — she was already central to the canon she helped to form.
Octavio Paz's Sor Juana: Her Life and Her World (1988) remains the most substantial single study.
Asunción Lavrin's Brides of Christ: Conventual Life in Colonial Mexico (2008, Stanford University Press) illuminates the world of colonial convents in which Sor Juana worked.
Martha Lilia Tenorio's work on the villancicos and recent scholarship on Sor Juana's engagement with Indigenous and African voices. For the English-speaking reader, the Feminist Press's ongoing translations make new dimensions of her work accessible.
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