María de Zayas y Sotomayor was born in Madrid, and baptised on 12 September, 1590. Her family was noble, her father holding important positions in the military and in service to the ari... (Read more...)
María de Zayas is thought of as a feminist writer, championing the role of women and depicting female characters as strong and capable of controlling their own lives. Her play, La traic... (Read more...)
As a dramatist, Zayas departs from the typically male-controlled world of the comedia and gives her female characters the will and the power to court and marry the men of their choosin... (Read more...)
Ordóñez, Elizabeth J. 1985. 'Woman and Her Text in the Works of María de Zayas and Ana Caro', Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, 19, 1, 3-15
Armas, Frederick de. 1976. The Invisible Mistress: Aspects of Feminism and Fantasy in the Golden Age. Biblioteca Siglo de Oro. Charlottesville, Virginia
Brownlee, Marina S. 1995. ‘Postmodernism and the Baroque in María de Zayas’. In Cultural Authority in Golden Age Spain, eds. Marina S. Brownlee and Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, pp. 107-27. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press
Soufas, Teresa Scott. 1996. Dramas of Distinction: A Study of Plays by Golden Age Women. Lexington, University Press of Kentucky
Soufas, Teresa Scott. 1997. ‘María de Zayas y Sotomayor’. In Women’s Acts: Plays by Women Dramatists of Spain’s Golden Age, ed. Teresa Scott Soufas, pp. 273-6. Lexington, University Press of Kentucky
This is a useful bibliography on this author: http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/L/A-Robert.R.Lauer-1/Zayas.html [Accessed July 2010] (Online Publication)
Useful website on this author: http://home.infionline.net/~ddisse/zayas.html [Accessed July 2010] (Online Publication)
Vollendorf, Lisa. 2005. ‘Women Onstage: Angela de Azevedo, María de Zayas, and Ana Caro’. In The Lives of Women: A New History of Inquisitional Spain, pp. 74-89. Nashville, Vanderbilt University Press
Review of this book by Kathleen Costales. 2008. Comedia Performance, 5, 1.
Williamsen, Amy R. 1992. ‘Engendering Interpretation: Irony as Comic Challenge in María de Zayas’, Romance Languages Annual, 3, 643-8
Williamsen, Amy R. and Valerie Hegstrom, eds. 1999. Engendering the Early Modern Stage: Women Playwrights in the Spanish Empire. New Orleans, University Press of the South
Williamsen, Vern. 1982. The Minor Dramatists of Seventeenth-Century Spain. Boston, Twayne
Entry written by Kathleen Jeffs. Last updated on 13 October 2010.
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