Distributed for Iter Press
Autobiography and Letters of a Spanish Nun
When María Vela y Cueto (1561–1617) declared that God had personally ordered her to take only the Eucharist as food and to restore primitive dress and public penance in her aristocratic convent, the entire religious community, according to her confessor, “rose up in wrath.” Yet, when Vela died, her peers joined with the populace to declare her a saint. In her autobiography and personal letters, Vela speaks candidly of the obstacles, perils, and rewards of re-negotiating piety in a convent where devotion to God was no longer expressed through rigorous asceticism. Vela’s experience, told in her own words, reveals her shrewd understanding of the persuasive power of a woman’s body.
192 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2016
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Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Note on Translation 49
Vida of María Vela y Cueto 53
Letters of María Vela y Cueto 140
Appendix I: Chronology of the Life of María Vela y Cueto 167
Bibliography 171
Index 183
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