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María Clara

María Clara de los Santos is a character in José Rizal's novel Noli Me Tángere (1887). The beautiful María Clara is the childhood sweetheart and fiancée of the protagonist, Crisóstomo Ibarra, who returns to his Filipino hometown of San Diego to marry her. After Ibarra is implicated in a fake revolution and is thought to be dead, María Clara opts to become a nun rather than marry another man. She remains unhappy for the rest of her life and her death is later mentioned in the sequel, El filibusterismo (1891).

María Clara
Noli Me Tángere character
Leonor Rivera, who was José Rizal's childhood sweetheart, served as the inspiration for the fictional character María Clara
Created byJosé Rizal
In-universe information
GenderFemale
OccupationMonastic
FamilySantiago de los Santos (father)
Padre Dámaso (biological father)
Pía Alba (mother)
RelativesIsabel (aunt)
ReligionRoman Catholic
NationalityFilipino

Description

In the novel, María Clara is regarded as the most beautiful and celebrated lady in the town of San Diego. A devout Roman Catholic, she became the epitome of virtue; "demure and self-effacing" and endowed with beauty, grace and charm, she was promoted by Rizal as the "ideal image"[1] of a Filipino woman who deserves to be placed on the "pedestal of male honour". In Chapter 5, María Clara and her traits were further described by Rizal as an "Oriental decoration" with "downcast" eyes and a "pure soul".[2]

Characterization

Physical appearance

Because of her parentage, María Clara had Eurasian features, described by Rizal thus:

"María Clara did not have the small eyes of her father: like her mother she had them large and black, beneath long lashes; gay and smiling when she played, sad and soulful and pensive when she was not laughing. Since childhood her hair had an almost golden hue; her nose, of a correct profile, was neither sharp nor flat; her mouth reminded one of her mother's, small and perfect, with two beautiful dimples on her cheeks. Her skin had the fine texture of an onion layer, the whiteness of cotton, according to her enthusiastic relatives. They saw traces of Capitan Tiago's paternity in the small and well-rounded ears of María Clara."[3]

Biography and personality

The beautiful María Clara is the childhood sweetheart and fiancée of the protagonist, Crisóstomo Ibarra, who returns to his Filipino hometown of San Diego to marry her. After Ibarra is implicated in a fake revolution and is thought to be dead, María Clara opts to become a nun rather than marry another man. She remains unhappy for the rest of her life and her death is later mentioned in the sequel, El filibusterismo (1891).

María Clara is the only daughter of the wealthy Kapitán Tiago and Doña Pia Alba. However, it is later revealed that her biological father is Father Dámaso, a priest who is one of the novel's antagonists, who became her godfather. Interpretations vary on whether Dámaso seduced or/and raped Pia Alba.[4]

María Clara had been described in her childhood as everybody's idol, growing up among smiles and loves.[3] Although Noli only touches upon her briefly in chapters, she is depicted as playful, exchanging wit and bantering with Ibarra, as well as expressing jealous possession when talking about him to her friends.[5]

She is also very kind and considerate, and notices people whom others do not; she was the only person who noticed Elías during the fishing excursion and offered him biscuits.[6] During the eve of the feast of San Diego, she also approached and offered her locket to a leper, despite her friends' warnings and shows of disgust.[7]

During the latter half of the novel, she was often sickly and subdued. Having been separated from Ibarra, and hearing the news of his excommunication, she took ill, and eventually was blackmailed by Padre Salvi into distancing herself from Ibarra. She was also coerced into giving up Ibarra's love letters, which were ultimately used to implicate him.[8]

In spite of her broken engagement with Ibarra, and subsequent engagement to Linares, she remained fiercely devoted to Ibarra. Upon hearing the news of his death, she told Padre Dámaso:

"While he was alive, I was thinking on keeping on: I was hoping, I was trusting! I wanted to live to be able to hear about him... but now that they have killed him, there is no longer a reason for me to live and suffer... While he was alive, I could get married... I thought of flight afterwards... my father does not want anything but the connections! Now that he is dead nobody else shall claim me as his wife... When he was alive, I could degrade myself, there was left the comfort of knowing he lived and perhaps would think of me. Now that he is dead... the convent for me or the grave!"[9]

This ultimatum caused Padre Dámaso to relent and permit his daughter's entry into the Royal Monastery of Saint Clare (that until 1945 stood in Intramuros).

Basis and legacy

Rizal based the fictional character of María Clara on his girlfriend and cousin, Leonor Rivera. Although praised and idolized, María Clara's chaste, "masochistic" and "easily fainting" character has also been denounced as the "greatest misfortune that has befallen the Filipina in the last one hundred years".[1][10]

In the 1920s, María Clara became what Nick Joaquin described as a saccharine ideal, a sentimentalized stock character.[11] Catholicism during Spanish colonial rule influenced a new ideal for Filipino women and led to taboos surrounding the discussion and expression of female sexuality. María Clara embodied the ideals and the impossible standard of purity, chastity and sacrifice.[12] While many scholars have attacked the idealized María Clara, writers such as Joaquin disagree that Rizal wrote the character as an example for Filipino women to imitate.[11] The ideal of María Clara continues into the 21st century and is used by brands. This depiction has reinforced the cultural expectation brought by Spanish colonialism that Filipinas should be modest, conservative and submissive towards men.[13]

Writers such as Joaquin, Ante Radaic, and Wenceslao Retana, saw María Clara as a symbol of the Philippines, especially in the sad fate which befalls her. Quintin C. Terrenal thought it likely that Rizal's contemporaries also saw the symbolism, and Ibarra himself said that she was "the poetic incarnation of my country".[14]

In Filipino fashion, María Clara's name has become the eponym for a multi-piece ensemble known as the María Clara gown, emulating the character's traits of being delicate, feminine, self-assured, and with a sense of identity.[15] In law, the María Clara doctrine originated in a 1960 case concerning a rape accusation. It states that "women, especially Filipinos, would not admit that they have been abused unless that abuse had actually happened. This is due to their natural instinct to protect their honor."[16]

In popular culture

Maria Clara has been portrayed in several films and television series:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Vartti, Riitta (editor). Preface to the Finnish anthology Tulikärpänen - filippiiniläisiä novelleja (Firefly - Filipino Short Stories), Kääntöpiiri: Helsinki, Finland 2001/2007
  2. ^ Yoder, Robert L. (July 16, 1998). "Philippine Heroines of the Revolution: Maria Clara They Were Not". Austro-Philippine Society. Retrieved March 24, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Rizal, José (1996). "Chapter 6: Capitan Tiago". Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  4. ^ Hau, Caroline S. (June 2017). "Did Padre Damaso Rape Pia Alba? Reticence, Revelation, and Revolution in José Rizal's Novels". Philippine Studies. 65 (2): 137–199. JSTOR 26621950.
  5. ^ Rizal, José (1996). Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  6. ^ Rizal, José (1996). "Chapter 23: The Fishing Excursion". Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. p. 183. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  7. ^ Rizal, José (1996). "Chapter 28: At Nightfall". Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. pp. 248–249. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  8. ^ Rizal, José (1996). "Chapter 61: Wedding Plans for Maria Clara". Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. pp. 532–535. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  9. ^ Rizal, José (1996). "Chapter 63: Padre Damaso Explains". Noli me tángere. Lacson-Locsin, Ma. Soledad (María Soledad), Locsin, Raul L. Makati: Bookmark. p. 547. ISBN 9715691889. OCLC 36165520.
  10. ^ The History of Filipino Women's Writings, an article from Firefly – Filipino Short Stories (Tulikärpänen – filippiiniläisiä novelleja), 2001 / 2007, retrieved on: April 2, 2010
  11. ^ a b Joaquin, Nick (1956). "The Novels of Rizal (An Appreciation)". In Orosa, Sixto Y. (ed.). Jose Rizal. Manila: Manor Press. p. 19–27.
  12. ^ Mendoza, S. Lily; Strobel, Leny Mendoza (2013). Back from the Crocodile's Belly: Philippine Babaylan Studies and the Struggle for Indigenous Memory. Santa Rosa, California: Center for Babaylan Studies. pp. 136–140. ISBN 978-1492775317.
  13. ^ Arias, Jacqueline (August 9, 2019). ""Maria Clara" is not always the best definition of Filipinas". Preen. Retrieved March 24, 2024.
  14. ^ Terrenal, Quintin C. (March 1976). "MARIA CLARA AND THE THREE MEN IN HER LIFE: An interpretation of Rizal's 'Noli me tangere'". Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society. 1976 (4): 1–18. JSTOR 29791232.
  15. ^ Moreno, Jose "Pitoy". Costume at the Fin de Siecle – Maria Clara, Philippine Costume, koleksyon.com
  16. ^ Hau, Caroline S. (2021). "The Afterlives of María Clara". Humanities Diliman. 18 (1): 118–161.

Bibliography

  • Hau, Caroline S. (2021). "The Afterlives of María Clara". Humanities Diliman. 18 (1): 118–161.

External links

  • Description of María Clara at en.wikibooks.org
  • Full text in Tagalog ("Ang Awit ni Maria Clara")
  • Full text in Spanish ("Canto de Maria")
  • Full text in English ("The Song of Maria Clara")

maría, clara, other, uses, disambiguation, santos, character, josé, rizal, novel, noli, tángere, 1887, beautiful, childhood, sweetheart, fiancée, protagonist, crisóstomo, ibarra, returns, filipino, hometown, diego, marry, after, ibarra, implicated, fake, revol. For other uses see Maria Clara disambiguation Maria Clara de los Santos is a character in Jose Rizal s novel Noli Me Tangere 1887 The beautiful Maria Clara is the childhood sweetheart and fiancee of the protagonist Crisostomo Ibarra who returns to his Filipino hometown of San Diego to marry her After Ibarra is implicated in a fake revolution and is thought to be dead Maria Clara opts to become a nun rather than marry another man She remains unhappy for the rest of her life and her death is later mentioned in the sequel El filibusterismo 1891 Maria ClaraNoli Me Tangere characterLeonor Rivera who was Jose Rizal s childhood sweetheart served as the inspiration for the fictional character Maria ClaraCreated byJose RizalIn universe informationGenderFemaleOccupationMonasticFamilySantiago de los Santos father Padre Damaso biological father Pia Alba mother RelativesIsabel aunt ReligionRoman CatholicNationalityFilipino Contents 1 Description 2 Characterization 2 1 Physical appearance 2 2 Biography and personality 3 Basis and legacy 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDescriptionIn the novel Maria Clara is regarded as the most beautiful and celebrated lady in the town of San Diego A devout Roman Catholic she became the epitome of virtue demure and self effacing and endowed with beauty grace and charm she was promoted by Rizal as the ideal image 1 of a Filipino woman who deserves to be placed on the pedestal of male honour In Chapter 5 Maria Clara and her traits were further described by Rizal as an Oriental decoration with downcast eyes and a pure soul 2 CharacterizationPhysical appearanceBecause of her parentage Maria Clara had Eurasian features described by Rizal thus Maria Clara did not have the small eyes of her father like her mother she had them large and black beneath long lashes gay and smiling when she played sad and soulful and pensive when she was not laughing Since childhood her hair had an almost golden hue her nose of a correct profile was neither sharp nor flat her mouth reminded one of her mother s small and perfect with two beautiful dimples on her cheeks Her skin had the fine texture of an onion layer the whiteness of cotton according to her enthusiastic relatives They saw traces of Capitan Tiago s paternity in the small and well rounded ears of Maria Clara 3 Biography and personality The beautiful Maria Clara is the childhood sweetheart and fiancee of the protagonist Crisostomo Ibarra who returns to his Filipino hometown of San Diego to marry her After Ibarra is implicated in a fake revolution and is thought to be dead Maria Clara opts to become a nun rather than marry another man She remains unhappy for the rest of her life and her death is later mentioned in the sequel El filibusterismo 1891 Maria Clara is the only daughter of the wealthy Kapitan Tiago and Dona Pia Alba However it is later revealed that her biological father is Father Damaso a priest who is one of the novel s antagonists who became her godfather Interpretations vary on whether Damaso seduced or and raped Pia Alba 4 Maria Clara had been described in her childhood as everybody s idol growing up among smiles and loves 3 Although Noli only touches upon her briefly in chapters she is depicted as playful exchanging wit and bantering with Ibarra as well as expressing jealous possession when talking about him to her friends 5 She is also very kind and considerate and notices people whom others do not she was the only person who noticed Elias during the fishing excursion and offered him biscuits 6 During the eve of the feast of San Diego she also approached and offered her locket to a leper despite her friends warnings and shows of disgust 7 During the latter half of the novel she was often sickly and subdued Having been separated from Ibarra and hearing the news of his excommunication she took ill and eventually was blackmailed by Padre Salvi into distancing herself from Ibarra She was also coerced into giving up Ibarra s love letters which were ultimately used to implicate him 8 In spite of her broken engagement with Ibarra and subsequent engagement to Linares she remained fiercely devoted to Ibarra Upon hearing the news of his death she told Padre Damaso While he was alive I was thinking on keeping on I was hoping I was trusting I wanted to live to be able to hear about him but now that they have killed him there is no longer a reason for me to live and suffer While he was alive I could get married I thought of flight afterwards my father does not want anything but the connections Now that he is dead nobody else shall claim me as his wife When he was alive I could degrade myself there was left the comfort of knowing he lived and perhaps would think of me Now that he is dead the convent for me or the grave 9 This ultimatum caused Padre Damaso to relent and permit his daughter s entry into the Royal Monastery of Saint Clare that until 1945 stood in Intramuros Basis and legacyRizal based the fictional character of Maria Clara on his girlfriend and cousin Leonor Rivera Although praised and idolized Maria Clara s chaste masochistic and easily fainting character has also been denounced as the greatest misfortune that has befallen the Filipina in the last one hundred years 1 10 In the 1920s Maria Clara became what Nick Joaquin described as a saccharine ideal a sentimentalized stock character 11 Catholicism during Spanish colonial rule influenced a new ideal for Filipino women and led to taboos surrounding the discussion and expression of female sexuality Maria Clara embodied the ideals and the impossible standard of purity chastity and sacrifice 12 While many scholars have attacked the idealized Maria Clara writers such as Joaquin disagree that Rizal wrote the character as an example for Filipino women to imitate 11 The ideal of Maria Clara continues into the 21st century and is used by brands This depiction has reinforced the cultural expectation brought by Spanish colonialism that Filipinas should be modest conservative and submissive towards men 13 Writers such as Joaquin Ante Radaic and Wenceslao Retana saw Maria Clara as a symbol of the Philippines especially in the sad fate which befalls her Quintin C Terrenal thought it likely that Rizal s contemporaries also saw the symbolism and Ibarra himself said that she was the poetic incarnation of my country 14 In Filipino fashion Maria Clara s name has become the eponym for a multi piece ensemble known as the Maria Clara gown emulating the character s traits of being delicate feminine self assured and with a sense of identity 15 In law the Maria Clara doctrine originated in a 1960 case concerning a rape accusation It states that women especially Filipinos would not admit that they have been abused unless that abuse had actually happened This is due to their natural instinct to protect their honor 16 In popular cultureThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2023 Maria Clara has been portrayed in several films and television series Edita Vidal in the film Noli Me Tangere 1961 Maria Jose Arnaldo in the ABC television series Noli Me Tangere 1992 Monique Wilson in the film Jose Rizal 1998 and various Musical Plays Julie Anne San Jose in the GMA television series Maria Clara at Ibarra 2022 2023 See alsoCult of domesticity English rose epithet Girl next door Ideal womanhoodReferences a b Vartti Riitta editor Preface to the Finnish anthology Tulikarpanen filippiinilaisia novelleja Firefly Filipino Short Stories Kaantopiiri Helsinki Finland 2001 2007 Yoder Robert L July 16 1998 Philippine Heroines of the Revolution Maria Clara They Were Not Austro Philippine Society Retrieved March 24 2024 a b Rizal Jose 1996 Chapter 6 Capitan Tiago Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark pp 50 51 ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 Hau Caroline S June 2017 Did Padre Damaso Rape Pia Alba Reticence Revelation and Revolution in Jose Rizal s Novels Philippine Studies 65 2 137 199 JSTOR 26621950 Rizal Jose 1996 Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 Rizal Jose 1996 Chapter 23 The Fishing Excursion Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark p 183 ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 Rizal Jose 1996 Chapter 28 At Nightfall Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark pp 248 249 ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 Rizal Jose 1996 Chapter 61 Wedding Plans for Maria Clara Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark pp 532 535 ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 Rizal Jose 1996 Chapter 63 Padre Damaso Explains Noli me tangere Lacson Locsin Ma Soledad Maria Soledad Locsin Raul L Makati Bookmark p 547 ISBN 9715691889 OCLC 36165520 The History of Filipino Women s Writings an article from Firefly Filipino Short Stories Tulikarpanen filippiinilaisia novelleja 2001 2007 retrieved on April 2 2010 a b Joaquin Nick 1956 The Novels of Rizal An Appreciation In Orosa Sixto Y ed Jose Rizal Manila Manor Press p 19 27 Mendoza S Lily Strobel Leny Mendoza 2013 Back from the Crocodile s Belly Philippine Babaylan Studies and the Struggle for Indigenous Memory Santa Rosa California Center for Babaylan Studies pp 136 140 ISBN 978 1492775317 Arias Jacqueline August 9 2019 Maria Clara is not always the best definition of Filipinas Preen Retrieved March 24 2024 Terrenal Quintin C March 1976 MARIA CLARA AND THE THREE MEN IN HER LIFE An interpretation of Rizal s Noli me tangere Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 1976 4 1 18 JSTOR 29791232 Moreno Jose Pitoy Costume at the Fin de Siecle Maria Clara Philippine Costume koleksyon com Hau Caroline S 2021 The Afterlives of Maria Clara Humanities Diliman 18 1 118 161 BibliographyHau Caroline S 2021 The Afterlives of Maria Clara Humanities Diliman 18 1 118 161 External linksDescription of Maria Clara at en wikibooks org Full text in Tagalog Ang Awit ni Maria Clara Full text in Spanish Canto de Maria Full text in English The Song of Maria Clara Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Clara amp oldid 1215426778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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