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domingo, 5 de abril de 2015

Body and Soul: traces of female identity in colonial Cartagena de Indias.

In the second half of the twentieth century, the Colombian historiography underwent significant changes in its essence. This, with the previous professionalization, institutionalization (concretized in the creation of the Colombian Academy of History) and the incursion of different historiographical trends in the historical  discipline. The Caribbean - Colombian and Cartagena - specifically historiography were not strangers to this trend. As aggregates academies in the region, with a narrative trend of history, a little less risky, compared to other regions, with respect to thematic proposals concerning the New History and the complement of interdisciplinary arise. Thus, for a long time concentrated their studies and analysis in temporalities, variables and specific social actors in the colonial and independent´s   period.
For other hand, women as historical subject, was the initial process they marginalized Colombian historiographical construction. Your raid was motivated largely by the achievements of the feminist movement in Europe and the U.S. and whose impact - lucky - in Colombia, led to its historical inclusion when Suzy Bermudez from anthropology I placed at the scene of debate. Thus, the historiography of women has grown in recent decades, with topics relating to political participation, social and legal status and their contribution in different periods of history. However, this inclusion was not free to adopt the heroic narrative models - own - traditional historiography as required to build their own space in the academy methodological step. Also, to have the station voice of women elites as pioneers in the public debate on the women’s right.
Martha Lux -Psychologist and historian- presents in the text: "Women in Cartagena de Indias in the century XVII. What they did, they did and did and cures prescribing them", an analysis in relation to the discourses uttered on women of colonial Cartagena, in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth´s century. The author makes use of specific documentary sources such as medicinal speeches Nieto Juan Méndez, the work of Alonso de Sandoval, the evidence collected during the canonization of Pedro Claver and the pastoral letters of bishops. Methodologically confronts the physician with religious discourse, and through the evidence establishes approaches to the elements of the social and cultural life of Cartagena's colonial society, to reconstruct aspects of female -individual and collective - identity of the time. Rate the difficulty of the sources used for this research because of its origin - but at the same time, notes his contribution on the issue of identities of colonial women. Denoting the use the author has given these documentary sources, shows their importance and historiographical contribution to a little- studied national and local levels.
Similarly, suggests the variables appended to this research and have been key in the analysis of this theme: family, miscegenation, honor, strength, gender, including widely studied from an interdisciplinary national and international level . Here, Martha Lux also clarifies the functionality of the concepts used in this work as gender, ethnicity, habitus, symbolic capital, cultural circularity as important variables that help to understand the internal and external dynamics of society colonially text consists three chapters: first, Cartagena de Indias in transit sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; second , Cartagena Women auscultated by the Doctor Méndez Nieto and third, Heals the soul and body.
An introductory paragraph of the text, induces a historical and geographical approach to colonial Cartagena de Indias, his evolution as urban space and the growing importance that the city acquired over time. Moreover, explicit characterization of medical discourse regarding religious, constant in the life of colonial women. In the first chapter : " Cartagena de Indias in transit sixteenth and seventeenth´s century ," Martha Lux produces a geo - historical reference on colonial Cartagena de Indias, showing nascent organizational elements of the urban environment ( churches, hospitals , convents , streets, squares, fortifications , public works ... ) , evidencing the early architectural breakthrough that reinforced the revealing nature of Cartagena, as a strategic site for the Spanish Crown. Similarly, she illustrates urban elements, demographic and trade , resulted in the increase of the population, " development" , concerns about health , hygiene in public spaces and the civil and ecclesiastical hierarchy .
For another context own hand, makes early contact between Spaniards and Indians , as an element of interaction "violent" that contributed significantly to the cultural and biological miscegenation. In this regard, evidence that the roles played by both Indian and Indian settings servile relations as cultural mediators and the effect of caring relationships between masters and indian. So , the author , points tax and social effects of the black raid in the port of Cartagena , by providing re- configurations in everyday practices in the family , religion , ways of thinking and symbolic and evaluative conception of black .
This denotes the "white” dominance in the city, mainly people of Andalusian origin, in respect of the hegemony of the civil power, confirmed by control of the House of Trade, which in turn regulates the passage of women Latin conditioned under male guardianship. On the other hand, shows the distribution of responsibilities and duties, showing an occupational hierarchical order in colonial Cartagena. Finally, it shows the role of the church as an evangelist and regulator of morality and its tensions with the order civil.
In another aspect scores conception they had of women in colonial society, Marian idealization of motherhood and selflessness and how this factor determined the relationship between men and women. In this sense, according to the author, what were reinforced imaginary legitimate and illegitimate, good and evil, sacred and profane, based on the interest of a social whitening and cultural.
Martha Lux, evidence of gender inequality and class, patriarchal and class under a regime that favored social status of men in legal and social level. In this respect, honor scores supremacy in this society. Essentially, it is evident that although combining this type of order in colonial society , transgressed practices expressed in the miscegenation , concubinage , infanticide , prostitution, exposing the complexity of the context concretized in practice demonstrated cultural circularity.
By second chapter, "Women of Cartagena auscultated by the doctor Méndez Nieto " shows the close relationship established with the physician Méndez Nieto  with all women from colonial society , both elites and popular sectors. Notes that due to the precarious circumstances in colonial society, physicians were early residents of this area and as regards medical practice also existed a  hierarchy of roles between the physician, the surgeon and the case of Mendez apothecary. By Nieto, the author highlights their important role in colonial Cartagena sixteenth´s and seventeenth´s century, as their records allowed a rough reading of the social and cultural life of the period. In complement, showing the relationship of the physician with government officials , which earned influence to avoid prosecution for their dubious origins .
The author shows the influence that the academic and intellectual training Méndez Nieto, which allowed him to be open to moral thought and naturalist, achieving combined theory of scientific knowledge with the lore . In addition to his interest in restoring points between the body and soul of the patients, acting as a mediator and confessor of bodies and souls. According to the text , Méndez Nieto won a very close relationship and even " complicit " with their patients , allowing you to be flexible with the reality they experienced in their desires , frustrations and pains, on issues related to sexuality , hygiene, cosmetic , physiological care and issues of the soul ( as melancholia ) ,theirs area  in the social determinants of each member of society colonial.
In another instance, the author reveals the norms that prevailed in colonial society with regard to the relationship between marriage, heritage and family, as transcendental to maintain status and symbolic capital, mainly in the elite member. It shows that the prestige and honor were two determining variables in decisions that guided both men and women around the personal - conduct outside marriage or religious - which also gave prestige. Although the text is also evidence the character prevented Méndez Nieto mulatto with such revealing incident in their reports with them , but still leaving record of activities , dynamics and roles of these women in the getsemanicense space and networks gender and class solidarity against some circumstances.
In the final chapter: “Heals the soul and the body," Martha Lux evidence strategies evangelists of the church, as expressed in the presence of bishops and clergy as Pedro Claver . Sample initial communication difficulties and cultural problems that led to implement strategies of evangelization by the religious institution. This as “teaching " strategy to control these communities. Points out that the church was a place of complaint and reproduction relations of domination and power which came to regulate the dress, cultural practices such as dance and social practices as a symbol of respect and status. El contribution of this paper lies in its dual contribution, not only in regard to colonial historiography, but in the history of women. This text seems to respond to emergencies face stigma and simplicity of the colony as a temporary, negative and reductionist characteristics and historical claim of the female subject.
However, for the main topics addressed, as is the issue of identity, something very complex, the contributions are subjected to only view specific characters (Méndez Nieto and religious figures). Though this is a good beginning, necessary to contrast these approaches to what was written of women, for example, from the rest of the colonial institutions and from other social groups. The latter , of course, not diminishing the investigative work of Martha Lux, but - on the contrary, suggests its ability to open a new door to new methodological and theoretical approaches in the history of women and colonial history.

BY: CAROLINA OROZCO MARRUGO
UNIVERSITY OF CARTAGENA

CARTAGENA DE INDIAS-COLOMBIA

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