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- Title
Las primeras impresoras del siglo XVII en Nueva España: el caso de María de Espinosa (1612-1615). Estudio y catálogo de su producción impresa.
- Authors
Lorente Queralt, Núria
- Abstract
The typographic universe of the New Spain of the sixteenth century had the presence of women from the moment in which the first printing press was moved to the American continent in the summer of 1539. The development of the New Hispanic publishing industry led to the access of many women to printed literature and encouraged them the possibility of participating in the social and cultural projection of colonial Mexico of the first centuries. The case of María de Espinosa (1612-1615), daughter of Antonio de Espinosa (1559-1576) and widow of Diego López Dávalos (1601-1611) is one of the most paradigmatic, since her professional development was closely linked to the uses and changes that would take place with the transmission of the printed word and with the cultural transformations that encouraged its diffusion and development in the continent.
- Subjects
MEXICO; CAREER development; SOCIAL evolution; SIXTEENTH century; PUBLISHING; PRINTING presses; WIDOWS
- Publication
Hipogrifo: revista de literatura y cultura del siglo de oro, 2023, Vol 11, Issue 1, p819
- ISSN
2328-1308
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.13035/H.2023.11.01.47