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Transcending Conquest: Nahua Views of Spanish Colonial Mexico [Hardcover]

Stephanie Wood (Author)

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Book Description

March 31, 2003 0806134860 978-0806134864

Columbus arrived on North American shores in 1492, and Cortés had replaced Moctezuma, the Aztec Nahua emperor, as the major figurehead in central Mexico by 1521. Five centuries later, the convergence of “old” and “new” worlds and the consequences of colonization continue to fascinate and horrify us. In Transcending Conquest, Stephanie Wood uses Nahuatl writings and illustrations to reveal Nahua perspectives on Spanish colonial occupation of the Western Hemisphere.

Mesoamerican peoples have a strong tradition of pictorial record keeping, and out of respect for this tradition, Wood examines multiple examples of pictorial imagery to explore how Native manuscripts have depicted the European invader and colonizer. She has combed national and provincial archives in Mexico and visited some of the Nahua communities of central Mexico to collect and translate Native texts. Analyzing and interpreting changes in indigenous views and attitudes throughout three hundred years of foreign rule, Wood considers variations in perspectives--between the indigenous elite and the laboring classes, and between those who resisted and those who allied themselves with the European intruders.

Transcending Conquest goes beyond the familiar voices recorded by scribes in central colonial Mexico and the Spanish conquerors to include indigenous views from the outlying Mesoamerican provinces and to explore Native historical narratives from the sixteenth through the eighteenth century. Wood explores how evolving sentiments in indigenous communities about increasing competition for resources ultimately resulted in an anti-Spanish discourse, a trend largely overlooked by scholars--until now. Transcending Conquest takes us beyond the romantic focus on the deeds of the Spanish conqueror to show how the so-called “conquest” was limited by the ways that Native peoples and their descendants reshaped the historical narrative to better suit their memories, identities, and visions of the future.

 


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Stephanie Wood is Research Associate at the Center for the Study of Women in Society at the University of Oregon. She is coeditor of Indian Women of Early Mexico, also published by the University of Oklahoma Press.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
So wrote William H. Prescott, celebrated mid-nineteenth-century author of The History of the Conquest of Mexico, one of the first seemingly comprehensive treatments of the Spanish invasion of Mexico (Prescott 1964 [1843], 17). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
primordial titles, viceregal period, indigenous nobles, indigenous observers, gold hunger, pictorial manuscripts, curule chair, indigenous world, town founder, native texts, indigenous voices, indigenous perspectives, nous people
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mapa de Cuauhtlantzinco, New Spain, Stephanie Wood, Florentine Codex, Latin American Library, Mexico City, Diaz del Castillo, Martha Barton Robertson, Tulane University, Castro Morales, Nationale de France, Mapa de Chalchihuapan, Charles Gibson, James Lockhart, Mexican Manuscript, Lienzo de Tlaxcala, Reyes Garcia, Santa Marta, British Museum, James Axtell, Las Casas, Luis de Velasco, Pedro de Ahumada, Robert Carmack, San Juan Cuauhtlantzinco
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