This dissertation analyzes various types of non-canonical texts authorized by women from a wide spectrum of classes and races in the Spanish colonies. The female voice, generally absent from official colonial documents of the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteen centuries, left a gap in the complex subject of women\u27s history and social participation. Through the study of personal letters, autobiographies, journals, court documents, inquisitorial transcripts, wills and testaments, edicts, orders, proclamations and posters, that voice is recovered. Thus, the Indigenous, Spaniards and African women and their descendants who lived during this period left their written legacy and proof of participation. Beginning with a thorough history of the...
213 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.To understand the erasure of ...
In this paper we study the value of words of some subaltern subjects – aborigine women – in a set of...
This dissertation traces the cultural memory of three magical/religious women of the colonial period...
This dissertation analyzes various types of non-canonical texts authorized by women from a wide spec...
New directions of research in colonial women’s studies on gender roles, periphery and margins, and d...
This text aims to offer a methodological analysis for women's discourse as «agents» in the colonial ...
Colonial documents preserve information that allows us to know the local Andean history of the Vicer...
Women’s literary expression in Latin America started as a crossroads of rhetorical practices and tex...
This study examines the intersections of gender and race in Mexico during the seventeenth and eighte...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
The purpose of this dissertation is to study the depictions of women through certain genres of oral ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 134-142).Investigating spiritual institutions and practic...
In this dissertation I examine the construction of space, gender, and literary form in the Spanish A...
The importance of the letter as a means for social, personal and intellectual expression for humanis...
This dissertation contemplates the lives and writings of three seventeenth-century Spanish Colonial ...
213 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.To understand the erasure of ...
In this paper we study the value of words of some subaltern subjects – aborigine women – in a set of...
This dissertation traces the cultural memory of three magical/religious women of the colonial period...
This dissertation analyzes various types of non-canonical texts authorized by women from a wide spec...
New directions of research in colonial women’s studies on gender roles, periphery and margins, and d...
This text aims to offer a methodological analysis for women's discourse as «agents» in the colonial ...
Colonial documents preserve information that allows us to know the local Andean history of the Vicer...
Women’s literary expression in Latin America started as a crossroads of rhetorical practices and tex...
This study examines the intersections of gender and race in Mexico during the seventeenth and eighte...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
The purpose of this dissertation is to study the depictions of women through certain genres of oral ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 134-142).Investigating spiritual institutions and practic...
In this dissertation I examine the construction of space, gender, and literary form in the Spanish A...
The importance of the letter as a means for social, personal and intellectual expression for humanis...
This dissertation contemplates the lives and writings of three seventeenth-century Spanish Colonial ...
213 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.To understand the erasure of ...
In this paper we study the value of words of some subaltern subjects – aborigine women – in a set of...
This dissertation traces the cultural memory of three magical/religious women of the colonial period...