Bárbara Louise Mujica is an American scholar, novelist, short story writer, literary critic and an academic. She is an Emeritus Professor of Spanish at Georgetown University.[1] Her novels include Frida (2001), Sister Teresa (2007), and Miss del Río (2022).
Bárbara Mujica | |
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Occupation | Scholar, novelist, short story writer, and critic |
Education | University of California at Los Angeles Sorbonne University |
Alma mater | New York University (PhD) |
Notable works | Frida Sister Teresa Miss del Río |
Website | |
www |
Mujica's work spans historical fiction, theater, mysticism, women's writing, early modern Spanish literature, and Latin American culture. Her authored works include essays, short stories and novels, such as Frida, Sister Teresa, and Miss del Río.[2][3][4] She has also received several awards, including first place in the 2015 Maryland Writers' Association National Fiction Competition for her story Jason's Cap.
Early life and education
editMujica attended the University of California at Los Angeles for her undergraduate education, and studied French literature.[5] She then attended Sorbonne University for graduate study in French, and completed her doctorate at New York University in Spanish literature, with Antonio Regalado as her dissertation advisor.[5]
Career
editMujica's writing career began with short stories, and she also taught Spanish literature.[5] Mujica was on the board of directors for the Washington Review from 1994 through 1998.[6][7]
Mujica was the founding editor of Comedia Performance, a journal focused on early modern theater, which she edited for 18 years.[8] In addition, she served as President Emerita of the Association for Hispanic Classical Theater. From 2003 to 2006, she was a judge for the Helen Hayes Awards, and she has also been an active member of the board of the GALA Hispanic Theater. Furthermore, she contributed to Américas, the cultural magazine of the Organization of American States, as its book review editor, publishing over 130 reviews and interviews with Latin American authors. In 2022 she was appointed as an Abby Freeman Artist-in-Residence at the Braid Theater. She served as faculty adviser for the Georgetown University Student Veterans Association and was also the Associate Facilitator of the Veterans Support Team, which aimed to make the campus more veteran-friendly. Moreover, she directed El Retablo, Georgetown's Spanish-language theater group, and actively participated in the university's veterans initiatives by serving on the advisory board of the Military and Veterans Resource Center (MAVRC). She served as a professor at Georgetown University before being named Professor Emerita of Spanish.[9]
In 2019, an essay collection was published to honor her scholarly work, titled Women Warriors in Early Modern Spain: A Tribute to Bárbara Mujica.[1]
Media coverage
editMujica's works have received media attention, with features in publications such as The Dallas, Morning Star, The Miami Herald and The New York Times.[10][11]
Works
editMujica has authored publications, including novels, essays, and short stories. Her first novel, The Deaths of Don Bernardo, was published in 1990. In 2002, she published Frida, which was later translated into seventeen languages.[5][12] The novel explored Frida Kahlo's life, art, and relationships within the cultural and political context of early 20th-century Mexico.[13] In Sister Teresa, later adapted for the stage at the Actors' Studio in Los Angeles, she depicted a wealthy girl's spiritual awakening in a convent during the Spanish Inquisition, addressing themes of faith, societal expectations, and personal growth, inspired by Saint Teresa of Ávila.[3] In I Am Venus, a winner of the Maryland Writers Association National Competition, she explored Velázquez's rise to fame through the eyes of his model for The Toilet of Venus, examining the intersection of art, scandal, and political turmoil in 17th-century Spain.[5] The book was reviewed by Carrie Callaghan in the Washington Independent Review of Books. She praised the book as a detailed and engaging novel that vividly captures the intrigue of Velázquez's life, art, and 17th-century Spain, using literary misdirection and evocative storytelling to explore themes of love, ambition, and illusion.[14]
Mujica also wrote on early modern literature and theater, with books including Shakespeare and the Spanish Comedia,[15] A New Anthology of Early Modern Spanish Theater: Play and Playtext,[16] Women Writers of Early Modern Spain, Early Modern Spanish Theater, and Staging and Stage Décor: Perspectives on European Theater 1500-1950.[17] She also wrote award-winning stories, such as Jason's Cap, Ox, and Imagining Iraq.[18] Her 2021 book Collateral Damage: Women Write about War highlighted women's wartime experiences as victims, resisters, and participants, revealing the overlooked emotional, social, and physical tolls of conflict on women and children worldwide.[19] Her most recent novel, Miss del Río, fictionalized the life of Mexican actress Dolores del Río, tracing her rise to Hollywood stardom, personal struggles, and the challenges of fame, identity, and prejudice.[5][20]
Awards and honors
edit- 2015 – First Prize, Maryland Writers' Association National Fiction Competition
- 2015 – Presidential Medal, Georgetown University
- 2016 – Dean’s Award for Excellence in Teaching, Georgetown University[21]
Bibliography
editBooks
editFiction
edit- The Deaths of Don Bernardo (1990) ISBN 9780915745142
- Sanchez Across the Street (1997) ISBN 9781877978753
- Frida (2002) ISBN 9780452283039
- Sister Teresa: The Woman Who Became Spain's Most Beloved Saint (2007) ISBN 9781585678341
- I Am Venus (2014) ISBN 9781468308907
- Miss del Río (2022) ISBN 9781525804991
Nonfiction
edit- Women Writers of Early Modern Spain: Sophia's Daughters (2004) ISBN 9780300092578
- Espiritualidad y feminismo : Santa Teresa de Jesús (2006) ISBN 9788479233754
- Shakespeare and the Spanish Comedia (2013) ISBN 9781611485172
- A New Anthology of Early Modern Spanish Theater: Play and Playtext (2015) ISBN 9780300109566
- Women Religious and Epistolary Exchange in the Carmelite Reform: The Disciples of Teresa de Avila (2020) ISBN 9789463723435
Selected articles
edit- Mujica, B. (1999). Golden Age/Early Modern theater: Comedia studies at the end of the century. Hispania, 82(3), 397–407.
- Mujica, B. (2001). Beyond image: The apophatic-kataphatic dialectic in Teresa de Ávila. Hispania, 84(4), 741–748.
- Mujica, B. (2007). María de Zayas on the Washington stage: Interview with Karen Berman. Comedia Performance, 4(1), 217–232.
- Mujica, B. (2013). Wisdom onstage: The evolution of sabiduría in Calderón’s autos sacramentales. Bulletin of Spanish Studies, 90(5–6), 787–806.
- Mujica, B. (2014). Healing on the margins: Ana de San Bartolome, convent nurse. Early Modern Studies, 6, 1–20.
- Mujica, B. (2015). Lope de Vega’s El castigo sin venganza: What do viewers know and when do they know it? Comedia Performance, 12(1), 50–80.
References
edit- ^ a b Lewis, Elizabeth Franklin (Spring 2021). "Women Warriors in Early Modern Spain: A Tribute to Bárbara Mujica. Ed. Susan L. Fischer and Frederick A. De Armas". Early Modern Women. 15 (2): 210–213. doi:10.1353/emw.2021.0014 – via Humanities Full Text (H.W. Wilson).
- ^ "Frida : a novel of Frida Kahlo - Qatar National Library".
- ^ a b "Sister Teresa : the woman who became Saint Teresa of Avila".
- ^ "Miss del Río - Boston Public Library".
- ^ a b c d e f Rolón-Barada, Israel (19 September 2022). "Bárbara Mújica, when intellect and fiction meet". CE Noticias Financieras. Translated by Content Engine LLC. ProQuest 2716026281
- ^ "Art Sites 6". Washington Review. 20 (2). Washington D.C. 1994. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
- ^ "Artsites 98 Catalog". Washington Review. 24 (1). Washington D.C. 1998. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
- ^ "Founding Editor - Comedia Performance".
- ^ "Barbara Mujica – Georgetown University".
- ^ "Opinion - No Comprendo".
- ^ "Opinion - BILINGUALISM'S GOAL".
- ^ Vazquez, Enrique (4 August 2021). "Libro Mi hermana Frida de Bárbara Mujica cumple 20 años". Milenio (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 14 October 2022.
- ^ Robinson, Roxana (April 15, 2001). "Portrait of the Artist". Washington Post. ProQuest 409067240
- ^ "I Am Venus - Washington Independent Review of Books".
- ^ "Shakespeare and the Spanish comedia : translation, interpretation, performance : essays in honor of Susan Fischer".
- ^ "A new anthology of early modern Spanish theater : play and playtext".
- ^ "Staging and stage décor : perspectives on European theater 1500-1950".
- ^ "Barbara Mujica - Music Writers Collective".
- ^ "Collateral damage : women write about war".
- ^ Vazques, Enrique (18 September 2022). "Jalisco. Bárbara Mujica habla de su última novela Miss del Río". Milenio (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 14 October 2022.
- ^ "Dean's Award for Excellence in Teaching".