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Heroism and Hierarchy: Week 3 Reading

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The shallow, simplistic nature of modern racialism is highlighted by the many-layered racial caste system in colonial Spain. This isn't to say either mindset is justifiable or rational, but while modern notions of race are the product of lazy generaliz... read full post >>
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Lieutenant Nun & Casta Paintings

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Lieutenant Nun, the memoir of Catalina de Erauso, who escaped the convent she was raised in from a young age and carried out the rest of her life disguised as man and travelling the Americas, I found both surprising and fascinating. Her story is surprising from a current perspective because of the uniqueness of her […] read full post >>
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Lieutenant Nun & Casta Paintings

Posted by: feedwordpress

Lieutenant Nun, the memoir of Catalina de Erauso, who escaped the convent she was raised in from a young age and carried out the rest of her life disguised as man and travelling the Americas, I found both surprising and fascinating. Her story is surprising from a current perspective because of the uniqueness of her […] read full post >>
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Week3: On casta paintings and the lieutenant nun

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ON CASTA PAINTINGS To me the most interesting thing about casta paintings is the variety of perspectives and responses of the viewers. As the text suggests, casta paintings were intended to convey a positive and prosperous image of racial mixture, so as to make a difference in a period when the creoles were discriminated against […] read full post >>
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Week 3: Lieutenant Nun & Casta Paintings

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Catalina de Erauso’s memoir as her life as a man is a very interesting read; we learn of how she escapes a convent at age fifteen, just days before she was to take her final vows. With no official plan really, she cuts her hair, fashions her nun garb into boy’s clothes, and never looks […] read full post >>
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Casta Paintings

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Unlike the colonization of Iceland, where immaculate records of ancestral pedigrees were kept and remain today, the colonization of Latin America resulted in complex ancestry among its people. Relationships among indigenous, European and African people are found throughout the history of Latin America, and played a prominent role in the development of the provacative artistic […] read full post >>
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Catalina de Erausa

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There are two ways to ensure adventure: be a nun and take up the guise of a man, or be a man and take up the habit of a nun. Much like Joan of Arc, or Mulan, Monja Alferez, a young girl living in 1600 Spain, snuck away from her convent, dressed a boy, and […] read full post >>
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Lieutenant Nun and Casta paintings

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I found this reading very interesting right from the start. The fact that Catalina was only raised with her family until the age of four was very surprising to me, as she was then sent to the convent to begin her training as a nun. This caused her to have absolutely no relationship with her family, especially her parents, as is revealed later in the passage. When she sees her father after leaving the convent, Catalina seems to have no emotional feelings towards him, which is understandable as she hardly ever knew him. Later, when Catalina goes back to the Convent to go to a mass an sees her mother, it is clear her mother looks right at her but does not recognize her own daughter.After Catalina left the convent, she was extremely fortunate in the people whom she met, as don Francisco de Carralta welcomed her into his home immediately, without even knowing she was in relation to his wife. This is a story od tremendous courage and self-belief, as Catalina made the decision to masquerade as a man an managed to keep this choice a secret until she told other herself.
 The Casta paintings were fascinating in the fact of the negative views on them in the 17th century, but all of this disappeared by the 18th century, an they became coveted and people would be willing to pay large sums of money in order to obtain one. The controversy in these paintings trailed back to the fact of the mixed race couples with mixed children. Back in Spain, the indigenous people were still thought of as inferior to them. The painting show a different view of the people, as they appear to be in urban setting, well dressed, and in some cases working different sorts of jobs. This would defy the European view, and cause them to worry that they may not be able to control the indigenous people as they had previously hoped.

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Lieutenant Nun and Casta paintings

Posted by: feedwordpress

I found this reading very interesting right from the start. The fact that Catalina was only raised with her family until the age of four was very surprising to me, as she was then sent to the convent to begin her training as a nun. This caused her to have absolutely no relationship with her family, especially her parents, as is revealed later in the passage. When she sees her father after leaving the convent, Catalina seems to have no emotional feelings towards him, which is understandable as she hardly ever knew him. Later, when Catalina goes back to the Convent to go to a mass an sees her mother, it is clear her mother looks right at her but does not recognize her own daughter.After Catalina left the convent, she was extremely fortunate in the people whom she met, as don Francisco de Carralta welcomed her into his home immediately, without even knowing she was in relation to his wife. This is a story od tremendous courage and self-belief, as Catalina made the decision to masquerade as a man an managed to keep this choice a secret until she told other herself.
 The Casta paintings were fascinating in the fact of the negative views on them in the 17th century, but all of this disappeared by the 18th century, an they became coveted and people would be willing to pay large sums of money in order to obtain one. The controversy in these paintings trailed back to the fact of the mixed race couples with mixed children. Back in Spain, the indigenous people were still thought of as inferior to them. The painting show a different view of the people, as they appear to be in urban setting, well dressed, and in some cases working different sorts of jobs. This would defy the European view, and cause them to worry that they may not be able to control the indigenous people as they had previously hoped.

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Catalina de Erauso, Lieutenant Nun

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The first time I read Lieutenant Nun I questioned whether the story was true. I agree with Stepto in that is does read like grand, picaresque adventure as Catalina de Erauso fled her convent and embarked on a journey which … Continue reading read full post >>
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