Luisa Capetillo
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Family name hatnote Template:Infobox writer Template:Anarcha-feminism sidebar Luisa Capetillo Perón (October 28, 1882 – April 4, 1922) was a Puerto Rican labor organizer, reader, writer, and journalist. She organized workers in Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and the United States. She also published four books in her lifetime, covering a wide variety of forms, genres, and topics. As an anarcha-feminist and social anarchist, she advocated for collective ownership of scientific advances, free love, universal education, and women's liberation while opposing state control.
Capetillo was born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. Her father taught her to read and write, and she read extensively, including works by influential political thinkers. In 1897, she took Manuel Ledesma, the son of a wealthy aristocrat, as her lover. The two separated in 1900, but their relationship influenced her later feminist works. She began writing for the local newspaper in 1904, and in 1905, she became involved with the Free Federation of Workers (Template:Langx, FLT), an anarcho-syndicalist union, helping organize an agricultural strike in Arecibo. In 1906, she became a reader at a cigar factory, meeting members of the FLT-affiliated Federation of Tobacco Rollers (Template:Langx, FTT) and becoming a leader in the FLT over time. Starting in 1912, she moved across the Atlantic and Caribbean, writing and organizing workers. In 1915, she was arrested for wearing trousers in Cuba and deported back to Puerto Rico. She continued to travel and organize until her death in 1922.
Interest in Capetillo's life surged in 1990 with the publication of Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Luisa Capetillo, History of an Outlawed Woman') by journalist Norma Valle Ferrer. After this, Capetillo became the subject of a docudrama series, and in 2014, the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico honored her with a plaque in the Plaza in Honor of Puerto Rican Women in San Juan. She is considered one of Puerto Rico's first feminists and, according to historian Jorrell A. Meléndez-Badillo, she was an influential node in an anarchist "counter-republic of letters": a network of writers who used their writing as a form of political struggle.
Early life
Luisa Capetillo Perón was born on October 28, 1882,Template:Refn in Arecibo, Puerto Rico.Template:Sfnm Her mother and father both moved there from Europe in the mid-1870s seeking economic opportunity. Her father, a Spaniard named Luis Capetillo Echevarría, worked as an administrator at an amusement park. When his finances worsened, he found employment as a seasonal laborer in various industries, including agriculture, construction, and dock work. Her mother, a Frenchwoman named Luisa Margarita Perón,Template:Refn worked as a governess for a wealthy family before becoming a laundry worker. The two were cohabiting together but not legally married when they had Luisa.Template:Sfnm Capetillo was baptized at the church of San Felipe Apóstol on June 24, 1890, when she was seven years old.Template:Sfn
Capetillo received some formal schooling, including at the Doña María Sierra Soler private school, where she received diplomas in geography, grammar, history, religious history, and reading.Template:Sfn Her father taught her to read and write, though he left Capetillo and her mother some time during her teenage years and never returned.Template:Sfn She read extensively, including works by political thinkers such as George Sand, John Stuart Mill, Madeleine Vernet, and Peter Kropotkin.Template:Sfnm
Capetillo often accompanied her mother to the wealthy estates she worked at.Template:Sfn One of these estates belonged to Don Gregorio Ledesma, the marquess of Arecibo and the leader of the Unconditional Spanish Party, which represented the interests of conservative Spaniards on the island.Template:Sfnm There, Capetillo met Ledesma's son, Manuel, and Manuel's friend Dr. Susoni, who competed for her affections.Template:Sfn Capetillo and Manuel became lovers in 1897.Template:Sfn That year, Capetillo gave birth to the couple's first child, Manuela, and Manuel inherited his father's properties and title. Around 1899, Capetillo gave birth to a second child, Gregorio. The children lived with Capetillo's mother while Capetillo herself moved between her family home and the Ledesma estate.Template:Sfn Capetillo and Ledesma's relationship was loving but turbulent.Template:Sfnm He expected her to be a dutiful wife and mother and to remain home at all times. They separated for unclear reasons around 1900.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn After the end of the relationship, Capetillo and Ledesma initially remained on friendly terms, with Ledesma legally recognizing their children, providing financial support for them, and taking care of their education.Template:Sfnm Capetillo's relationship with Ledesma influenced her later feminist writings.Template:Sfnm
Journalism and early organizing
Capetillo began writing for the local Arecibo newspaper in 1904.Template:Sfnm Her writings were pro-trade union and influenced by anarchist thought. In January 1905, she helped organize an agricultural workers' strike in the town, leading marches and reading to striking workers from atop benches in the local plaza.Template:Sfnm This strike was part of a broader agricultural strike in northern Puerto Rico led by the Free Federation of Workers (Template:Langx, FLT), an anarcho-syndicalist union.Template:Sfnm During the strike in Arecibo, police threatened to shoot into the crowds of striking workers.Template:Sfn When it ended in February, workers received a 15–30% wage increase and a ten-hour workday, though they had initially asked for eight hours.Template:Sfnm
In 1906, Capetillo became a reader at a cigar factory.Template:Sfn Cigar factory readers stood on elevated platforms to read newspapers and other literature to cigar makers as they worked.Template:Sfn She also worked independently as a seamstress, making blouses and handkerchiefs from her home.Template:Sfn As a reader, Capetillo encountered members of the labor movement, including members of the Federation of Tobacco Rollers (Template:Langx, FTT), an affiliate of the FLT.Template:Sfnm She became a prominent FLT leader, traveling throughout Puerto Rico to gain support from workers and other labor leaders.Template:Sfn In 1907, she published her first book, Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Libertarian Essays'), where she advocates for an egalitarian society, criticizes the clergy for its hypocrisy and selfishness, and casts life as a conflict between workers and capitalists.Template:Sfnm As she became more involved in the labor movement, her relationship with Ledesma soured. He withdrew his financial support from her and barred her from seeing their children.Template:Sfn
Capetillo participated in the FLT's Fifth Workers' Congress in 1908.Template:Sfn Women's suffrage was debated at the congress, with Capetillo arguing that the union should support all women's right to vote. While some wealthy and middle-class women argued that suffrage should only be granted to educated, literate women, the union ultimately supported universal suffrage, becoming one of its strongest supporters in Puerto Rico during the early twentieth century.Template:Sfn In 1909, Capetillo helped promote the magazine Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Labor Union'), which she wrote for, and began publishing her own magazine, Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'The Woman').Template:Sfn She also helped organize the FLT's Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Crusade for Ideals'), traveling across the island to host workshops and talk to workers about the union.Template:Sfn
In 1910, Capetillo published her second book, Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Humanity in the Future'), a utopian story about a general strike. She published her third book, Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'My Opinion on the Freedoms, Rights, and Duties of Women as Partners, Mothers, and Independent Beings', henceforth Template:Lang), in 1911.Template:Sfn The book includes essays discussing marriage, sex education, sex work, women's history, and women's rights.Template:Sfnm Capetillo also began a relationship with a married pharmacist in Arecibo around 1911, giving birth to her third child, Luis. Because Luis's father was already married, he refused to recognize Luis as his son. As a result, Luis went to live at Capetillo's mother's home.Template:Sfn
Transnational activism
Capetillo moved to New York City in 1912.Template:Sfn This move was part of a broader migration of Puerto Ricans to New York during the early twentieth century.Template:Sfnm While living there, she met Hispanic cigar makers and wrote for the anarchist newspapers Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Working Class Culture'), Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Muscle and Mind'), and Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Conscious Power').Template:Sfn In 1913, she moved to Ybor City, Florida, where many Hispanic cigar makers lived and worked.Template:Sfn She lived with a German machinist there and probably worked as a reader,Template:Refn forming close working relationships with other labor organizers.Template:Sfnm
In 1914, Capetillo moved to Cuba, where she lived in Havana and Cárdenas.Template:Sfn She worked with the Anarchist Federation of Cuba, drawing the suspicion of local authorities due to her connections with anarchist and labor activists.Template:Sfnm In 1915, she helped organize a sugarcane workers' strike, publicly advocated for the establishment of worker cooperatives, and supported an anarchist manifesto denouncing the Cuban government's repression of organized labor. Because of these activities, Cuban President Mario García Menocal ordered her deportation.Template:Sfn
Unrelated to the deportation order, Capetillo was arrested for wearing trousers in public on July 24, 1915. According to researcher Araceli Tinajero, the arresting officer claimed that her attire was "immoral" and "causing a scene".Template:Sfn Press reactions to her arrest were split. Mainstream papers ridiculed her and the anarchist movement in general while the radical press defended her right to dress how she wanted.Template:Sfn At her trial, Capetillo argued that no law forbade women from wearing trousers and that trousers were more comfortable and hygienic for modern working women.Template:Sfnm The judge was rendered speechless.Template:Sfn He released her, but she was deported to Puerto Rico in 1916.Template:Sfnm
Return to Puerto Rico
Upon returning to Puerto Rico, Capetillo published Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'The Influence of Modern Ideas'), most of which she had written in Ybor City.Template:Sfnm A multi-genre work, it consists of letters, notes, personal narratives, plays, and short stories.Template:Sfn In 1917, she helped lead an agricultural workers' strike in Patillas, during which she was clubbed by a police officer at a protest. She helped lead another strike in Ceiba in 1918. 30,000 FLT members took part in this strike, with Capetillo organizing rallies along the coast. During one of these rallies, on March 29, 1918, she was arrested for inciting a riot. Her US$400 bail (roughly Template:Inflation) was paid for by local workers. In 1919, she helped lead another strike in Vieques.Template:Sfn
Further travels
In 1919, Capetillo was invited to travel to Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic to speak at an event hosted by the local Free Federation of Workers (Template:Langx, FLT)Template:Refn during a cobblers' strike. After refusing a local censor's demand to read her speech in advance, Capetillo was barred from speaking but did help collect money for the workers' strike fund.Template:Sfn Capetillo also traveled to New York in 1919, possibly living there for some time.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfnm While there, she ran a boarding house where political gatherings took place, published in the labor press, and might have worked as a reader.Template:Sfn She also sought support from Samuel Gompers, the leader of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), for an agricultural farm school to educate poor Puerto Rican children.Template:Sfn Gompers gave her funds to create the school, but the project was banned by Puerto Rican authorities who thought that the school's funds should come from Puerto Ricans, not Americans.Template:Sfn
Later life and death
By 1920 or 1921,Template:Refn Capetillo had returned to Puerto Rico. There, she campaigned for the Socialist Party, which supported universal suffrage.Template:Sfnm Capetillo's biographer Norma Valle Ferrer states that this was "an apparent contradiction of her anarchist ideals", as classical anarchists opposed electoralism in favor of spontaneous revolution. Her reasons for supporting the party are unknown.Template:Sfn
While living in a small, under-construction house in Buen Consejo, Capetillo suffered an attack of tuberculosis, which she had contracted during her travels abroad. On April 10, 1922, accompanied by her son Luis, she went to the municipal hospital in Río Piedras, where she died. A delegation of FLT organizers accompanied her body back to her house, and she was buried in the municipal cemetery the next day.Template:Sfnm
Views
Anarchism
Template:Quote box In Template:Lang, Capetillo identifies herself as a socialist anarchist, arguing for collective ownership of "advances, discoveries, and inventions" while opposing state control.Template:Sfn This reflected the majority of Puerto Rican workers at the time.Template:Sfn According to researcher Stephanie Rivera Berruz, Capetillo was drawn to anarchism because it was "a political philosophy put into action".Template:Sfn Valle Ferrer states that she was also influenced by "Romantic anarchists" like Errico Malatesta and Leo Tolstoy.Template:Sfn Philosophically, Capetillo believed that humans are naturally kind and support equality but that they are corrupted by the social systems they live in.Template:Sfn Drawing on anarcho-syndicalist principles, she supported organized labor movements and the general strike as a tool for disrupting these systems.Template:Sfnm
Because of her anti-state views, Capetillo opposed the independence movement in Puerto Rico, viewing it as an oppressive force.Template:Sfnm She criticized the Puerto Rican Unionist Party, accusing them of being "egoists, exploiters, and aristocrats" who oppressed the island's workers.Template:Sfn Rivera Berruz argues that Capetillo's views on nationhood and the state were influenced by Puerto Rico's colonial status and her own status as a transnational migrant.Template:Sfn
Women's rights and free love
Capetillo is often considered the first feminist writer from Puerto Rico.Template:Sfn According to Rivera Berruz, Capetillo articulated feminist ideas long before the rise of the mainstream feminist movement in the 1960s.Template:Sfn She is also frequently associated with anarcha-feminism, a movement opposing government and patriarchal authority.Template:Sfnm In her work, she draws links between women's liberation and organized labor, advocating for an egalitarian system for men and women workers.Template:Sfnm She also calls for greater sexual freedom for women, describing women's sexual desire as being as natural as hunger and sleep.Template:Sfn She believed that motherhood was an essential aspect of womanhood, stating after giving birth to her first child that "a woman will always be a mother, even if she doesn't have children".Template:Sfn
Capetillo advocated for free love.Template:Sfn In her view, free love was the union of two people unrestrained by legal contracts and social conventions about families. She defined love as a union of free people, with free love being marked by mutual love, respect, and support.Template:Sfnm If either partner fell out of love, Capetillo believed that the relationship should end.Template:Sfn She called marriage the "prostitution of love". In her view, marriage forced women into passive roles and prevented them from exiting relationships, limiting their freedom and hence their ability to love. Many anarchists advocated for free love, both in Puerto Rico and abroad.Template:Sfn However, Capetillo's emphasis on women's exploitation in critiquing the institution of marriage was unique among anarchists and labor activists.Template:Sfn
Religion
Capetillo was a Christian, but she denounced organized religion throughout her life.Template:Sfnm In an essay from Template:Lang, she accuses the church of "trickery" and "hypocrisy", as well as wealth hoarding.Template:Sfn She believed that Mass and other religious ceremonies were primarily ways for wealthy women to show off their clothing and jewelry. Capetillo's ideal Christian tended to the poor and sick instead of attending Mass. While she was baptized as a child, she never baptized her own children, calling it a "denigrating mark".Template:Sfn Valle Ferrer argues that Capetillo's Christian beliefs were influenced by Tolstoy, who was a Christian anarchist.Template:Sfn
Capetillo was also influenced by Kardecist spiritism.Template:Sfn She believed in reincarnation, a spiritual body distinct from the physical, and a "plurality of habitable worlds".Template:Sfn Template:Lang begins with a quote from spiritist Camille Flammarion, a collaborator and friend of Allan Kardec.Template:Sfn Kardecist spiritists of the 19th century often called for liberty, equality, and fraternity, and researcher Carmen Ana Romeu Toro states that Capetillo was drawn to spiritism because it championed these values, among others.Template:Sfnm
Education
Capetillo viewed education as being essential to human liberation, allowing people to unlearn harmful ideas they received from society.Template:Sfn In one essay from Template:Lang, Capetillo argues for universal education without class or gender distinctions.Template:Sfn She also advocated specifically for women's education. In her view, women's education would bring greater financial and intellectual independence.Template:Sfn She believed that women's education should include the arts, sciences, and humanities, as well as discussion of women's sexual desires.Template:Sfn
Legacy
In Capetillo's obituary, which was published in Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Justice'), the FLT newspaper, editors compared her to revolutionary activists Louise Michel and Rosa Luxemburg. At the same time, they called her personality "semi-errant" and her advocacy for vegetarianism and love-based politics childish.Template:Sfn Historian Vicki L. Ruiz theorizes that in years later, labor organizer Luisa Moreno (born Blanca Rosa Rodríguez López), who also organized cigar workers in Florida in 1936, adopted the name "Luisa" in honor of Capetillo.Template:Sfn
Interest in Capetillo's life surged with the publication of Valle Ferrer's biography, Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Luisa Capetillo, History of an Outlawed Woman') in 1990. Two years later, in 1992, the book Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Love and Anarchy: Writings of Luisa Capetillo'), one of the few books at the time to include excerpts of Capetillo's writings, was published.Template:Sfn Led by Gloria Waldman-Schwartz, a team of students at the University of Puerto Rico produced an English translation of Valle Ferrer's biography of Capetillo, Luisa Capetillo, Pioneer Puerto Rican Feminist, in 2006.Template:Sfn
In 1994, a docudrama series called Template:Lang (Template:Translation 'Luisa Capetillo, Passion of Justice') was released. Directed by Template:Ill, the series is based on Valle Ferrer's biography of Capetillo.Template:Sfn In 2013, the play Template:Lang was staged at the Celébrate Theater in San Juan, Puerto Rico. On May 29, 2014, the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico honored Capetillo alongside 12 other women with plaques in the Plaza in Honor of Puerto Rican Women in San Juan.Template:Sfn
Valle Ferrer considers Capetillo "the first woman to successfully challenge prevailing prejudices against women by becoming an important labor leader and advocate for women and the poor".Template:Sfn According to her, many workers remember her for her "indomitable bravery" but ridicule her sexual politics.Template:Sfn The image of Capetillo wearing a pantsuit is popular in art and on commercial products.Template:Sfn
Literary scholarship
Historian Jorrell A. Meléndez-Badillo states that Capetillo formed part of an anarchist "counter-republic of letters": a network of writers who used their writing as a form of political struggle.Template:Sfn Independent researcher Julio Ramos lists Capetillo as one of several 20th-century Puerto Rican writers who challenged the idea that writing was an upper-class activity.Template:Sfn Researcher Nancy Bird-Soto states that Capetillo's writing reflects her "subversive nonconformism". According to Bird-Soto, Capetillo's nonconformism stemmed from her anarchist beliefs and her marginalized status as a Caribbean woman. In taking a nonconformist position, Bird-Soto argues, Capetillo challenges the colonial power structure by "proposing emancipated ways of being Puerto Rican".Template:Sfn
Researcher Araceli Tinajero states that Capetillo's career as a reader influenced her writing, with her early work being "written to be read aloud".Template:Sfn Bird-Soto and Othoniel Rosa agree with this assessment.Template:Sfnm Bird-Soto describes Capetillo's writing as "urgent", with syntax that is sometimes difficult to grasp. She argues that this reflects the patterns of oral speech, as "listeners at the factory would not have to concern themselves too much to think about sentence clauses".Template:Sfn Rivera Berruz also argues that Capetillo's style was designed to connect with her working-class audience and that she used popular genres such as drama and prose to spread her ideas.Template:Sfn
Utopias are a common theme in Capetillo's work. Template:Lang is a utopian novel about a general strike.Template:Sfn According to researcher Othoniel Rosa, Template:Lang "respects the conventions of the genre" and references other utopian stories published around the same time.Template:Sfn In the prologue to Template:Lang, Capetillo admits that her commitment to her ideals is "utopic", but argues that a society based around them is possible.Template:Sfn The play Template:Lang, from the collection of the same name, also features a utopian, egalitarian vision of society as envisioned by classical anarchists like Kropotkin.Template:Sfn
Bibliography
- Template:Lang (1907, Template:Translation 'Libertarian Essays')Template:Sfn
- Template:Lang (1910, Template:Translation 'Humanity in the Future')Template:Sfn
- Template:Lang (1911, Template:Translation 'My Opinion on the Freedoms, Rights, and Duties of Women as Partners, Mothers, and Independent Beings')Template:Sfn
- Template:Lang (1916, Template:Translation 'The Influence of Modern Ideas')Template:Sfn
See also
Notes
References
Sources
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- Template:Cite book NOTE: While Waldman-Schwartz is listed as the official translator, the book was actually translated by a team of students led by her. These students include Carolyn F. Castro Báez, Verónica, Cabrera Velarde, Carmen M. Espada, Ivonne López, Zaida M. Negrón, Eunice Rodríguez, and María B. Vásquez Lloréns.
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External links
- Pages with broken file links
- 1882 births
- 1922 deaths
- 20th-century anarchists
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- 20th-century Puerto Rican non-fiction writers
- 20th-century Puerto Rican women
- 20th-century Puerto Rican women writers
- American women non-fiction writers
- Anarcha-feminists
- Anarchist writers
- Christian anarchists
- People from Arecibo, Puerto Rico
- Puerto Rican activists
- Puerto Rican anarchists
- Puerto Rican feminists
- Puerto Rican people of Corsican descent
- Puerto Rican suffragists
- Puerto Rican women activists
- Puerto Rican women non-fiction writers
- Tuberculosis deaths in Puerto Rico
- Women trade union leaders