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Sor Juana/Música

How the Décima Musa Composed, Practiced, and Imagined Music

by Pamela H. Long (Author)
©2009 Monographs X, 143 Pages
Series: Ibérica, Volume 39

Summary

In her lost treatise on music which she titled El caracol, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz addressed the image of the spiral as a metaphor for musical harmony, an image which she distilled in one of her romances. Singing in the choir of the Templo de San Jerónimo, Sor Juana and the other nuns of her convent were raising the tone of their musica humana to be in accord with the music of the heavenly choirs, which the nuns were imitating in their singing. Octavio Paz theorizes a «triple interés» in music in Sor Juana’s works: «práctico, teórico, filósofico». Numerous poems allude to the theoretical and philosophical problems of music, resulting in many levels of metaphor and metonym concerning music, especially in the loas and villancicos. Not only does Sor Juana’s work address the metaphysical aspects of music, the musica speculative so popular in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but it broaches important questions on the practical applications of new theories of musical harmony: the musica practica. A talented poet, playwright, scientist, and mathematician, Sor Juana also explored musical instruments and theory. Sor Juana/Música investigates the musical aspects of Sor Juana’s literary achievements, exploring the dense metaphorical interplay of musical and literary images, and places her works within the musicological ambience of her time. With its interdisciplinary approach, Sor Juana/Música contributes not only to the understanding of Sor Juana’s literary works, but also to the degree that literature underpins the other arts as it illuminates the musicological times in which she lived.

Details

Pages
X, 143
Publication Year
2009
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433102691
Language
English
Keywords
colonial Juana Inés (de la Cruz) Musik music theory philosophy platonism Mexico musicology Nueva España seventeenth century Cerone Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Latin America
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2009. X, 143 pp., num. ill.

Biographical notes

Pamela H. Long (Author)

The Author: Pamela H. Long received her B.A. in speech communication and her M.A. in Hispanic studies from Auburn University in Alabama and her doctorate in Spanish from Tulane University in Louisiana. She is Associate Professor of International Studies at Auburn University and also the Hispanic minister at her church.

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Title: Sor Juana/Música