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Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz (1651-1695) was the most significant
literary figure of the colonial period in Spanish America.The autos
sacramentales, or Eucharistic plays are some of her least studied,
and most perplexing works. While one of them, El divino Narciso,
has received substantial scholarly attention, the other two, El
cetro de Jose and El martir del Sacramento, San Hermenegildo, have
been critically neglected in Sor Juana studies. This study presents
a full-length analysis of all three plays, along with their loas,
or the introductory pieces alongside which they were intended to be
performed. Furthermore, the study seeks to place these works in
their philosophical and cultural context by exploring their
engagement both with orthodox Catholic sacramental theology, and
the emergence of empiricism and the New Philosophy across the
Hispanic world. The three sections of this book each present
significant new readings of the three plays. The study of El divino
Narciso employs a previously little-known source to illuminate its
Christological readings, as well as Sor Juana's engagement with
notions of wit and conceptism. The analysis of El cetro de Jose
explores her presentation of different approaches to perception to
emphasise the importance of both the material and the transcendent
to a holistic understanding of the Sacraments. The final section,
on San Hermenegildo, explores the influence on the play of the
Christianised Stoicism of Justus Lipsius, and demonstrates how Sor
Juana used the work to attempt her most ambitious reconciliation of
an empirical approach to natural philosophy and the material world
with a Neostoic approach to Christian morality and orthodox
Catholic sacramental theology.
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