Simultaneously, in Chiapas, Mexico, the poet and novelist (1925–1974) was crafting a literary revolution. While not a sexologist, Castellanos wrote with a clinical, unflinching gaze about female desire, marital disappointment, and the psychological prison of gender roles. When placed side by side, the Kinsey Report provides the statistical backbone to Castellanos’s poetic rage. The Data vs. The Lyric Kinsey shocked 1950s America by revealing that nearly 50% of men and 26% of women had experienced extramarital sexual contact, and that same-sex behavior was far more common than acknowledged. His work decoupled morality from biology.
Castellanos gave voice to the women Kinsey could only count. Together, they form a complete picture of desire—one measured in percentages, the other in verses. kinsey report rosario castellanos english
"And so, / from the threshold of a century that I don’t want, / I shout: life, life, life." — Rosario Castellanos, "Meditation on the Threshold" Compare Kinsey’s The Female with Castellanos’s A Woman of Words (English translation by Myralyn Allgood). Look for the unspoken: the desire to be a subject, not an object. Simultaneously, in Chiapas, Mexico, the poet and novelist