She holds a Master’s degree in Asian and Africa with a specialization in Japan from El Colegio de México and a Bachelor’s degree in Hispanic Language and Literatures from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). She has collaborated with the University Program of Studies on Asia, Africa and Oceania in various events, including the Second Japanese Culture Conference: Yukio Mishima, 90 Years After His Birth, after which he published an article entitled “The Buddhist Notion of ‘taṇhā’ in Yukio Mishima’s Thirst for Love” for the book Yukio Mishima and his legacy in Mexico (UNAM), as well as in the Third Japanese Cultural Conference: Kōbō Abe. Her research interests focus on modern and contemporary Japanese literature and Japanese pop culture.
Relations between Mexico and Japan have taken a vertiginous course in recent decades, which propose the need to understand the nation of the Rising Sun not only from a commercial point of view but also from a political, religious, aesthetic and fine arts point of view. In this sense, Yukio Mishima stands as a spokesperson par excellence that, through literature, theatre, film and even modelling, is a parameter in Mexico to understand our partner on the other side of the Pacific.
In this work, he offers different perspectives from Mexican and Japanese experts who, summoned by the University Program of Studies on Asia and Africa (PUEAA-UNAM), from literature, diplomacy, hermeneutics, psychoanalysis, translation, peace studies and politics offer interpretations of Mishima's legacy while allowing us to know and understand Japan from the second half of the 20th century.