María Ruiz de Burton

María Ruiz de Burton
BornMaría Amparo Maytorena Ruiz
(1832-07-03)July 3, 1832
Loreto, Baja California
DiedAugust 12, 1895(1895-08-12) (aged 63)
Chicago, Illinois
Resting placePioneer Park (San Diego)
32°44′57″N 117°10′39″W / 32.7492°N 117.1776°W / 32.7492; -117.1776
OccupationWriter, political instigator
NationalityMexican American
CitizenshipAmerican
SpouseHenry S. Burton

María Amparo Ruiz de Burton (July 3, 1832 August 12, 1895) was a Californio author and intellectual, best known as the first female Mexican-American writer to be published in English. During her career, she published two books: Who Would Have Thought It? (1872) and The Squatter and the Don (1885); and one play: Don Quixote de la Mancha: A Comedy in Five Acts: Taken From Cervantes' Novel of That Name (1876).

Ruiz de Burton's work is considered to be one of the first instances of Mexican-American literature, and gives the perspective of the conquered Mexican population that, despite being granted full rights of citizenship by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, was a marginalized national minority. Her background provided her a critical distance from the New England Protestant culture into which she was brought by her marriage to her husband, a powerful and influential Protestant Union Army General, Henry S. Burton. Her life took her from coast to coast in the United States, which provided her with opportunity for first-hand observation of the U.S., its westward expansion, the American Civil War, and its aftermath. This vantage point and her status as a woman provided her with both an insider's and outsider's perspective on issues of ethnicity, power, gender, class, and race.