Owens is to be commended not only for the refreshingly clear prose she employs throughout the text, which is welcome to seasoned scholars as well as those just entering the field, but also her unflagging dedication to exploring and sharing the lives of early modern women.--Horacio Sierra, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Description
Nuns Navigating the Spanish Empire tells the remarkable story of a group of nuns who traveled halfway around the globe in the seventeenth century to establish the first female Franciscan convent in the Far East.
In 1620 Sor Jerónima de la Asunción (1556–1630) and her cofounders left their cloistered convent in Toledo, Spain, journeying to Mexico to board a Manila galleon on their way to the Philippines. Sor Jerónima is familiar to art historians for her portrait by Velázquez that hangs in the Prado Museum in Madrid. What most people do not know is that one of her travel companions, Sor Ana de Cristo (1565–1636), wrote a long biographical account of Sor Jerónima and their fifteen-month odyssey. Drawing from Sor Ana’s manuscript, other archival sources, and rare books, Owens’s study offers a fascinating view of travel, evangelization, and empire.
Genres
Reviews
Sarah E. Owens deftly uses primary and secondary sources to contextualize Sor Jerónima's accomplishments in this fascinating monograph, which reads more like a highly accessible popular press book than an impenetrable scholarly tome.--Feministas Unidas
Sarah E. Owens deftly uses primary and secondary sources to contextualize Sor Jerónima's accomplishments in this fascinating monograph, which reads more like a highly accessible popular press book than an impenetrable scholarly tome.--Feministas Unidas
Until the discovery of Sor Ana's text, scholars were only aware of the manuscript's existence from various references in published volumes and the positio for Jerónima's proposed sainthood. Owens's discovery and exegesis of the complete manuscript fills a known lacuna and thus constitutes a valuable addition to scholarship on nuns and women in the early modern Spanish empire.--Letras Femininas