In the novel La Sigea (1854) Carolina Coronado portrays a 16th-century humanist, Luisa Sigea de Velasco, revendicating her criticism of the situation of the creative woman. In this work, Coronado illustrates both the Renaissance reality of the scholarly courtesan, and her own nineteenth-century author-identity, by sharing the disappointment and frustration they suffered as women of letters in contexts of male hegemony. In the following pages we investigate the vindication of female authorship as a creative authority.
CITATION STYLE
Aboal López, M. (2020). Entre la voz y el silencio: autoridad femenina en La Sigea de Carolina Coronado. Neophilologus, 104(4), 503–517. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11061-020-09644-8
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