109 results on '"Nahua"'
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2. Threefold manuscripts: the nine texts of the Florentine Codex.
- Author
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Dufendach, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
MANUSCRIPTS , *SPANISH language , *NEGOTIATION , *ARBITRATION & award ,NEW Spain - Abstract
To understand the manuscript creation process practiced by Indigenous intellectuals in the Americas this essay examines the work of the Nahua scholars who, along with Bernardino de Sahagún, created the Florentine Codex (1575–1577). Now fundamental to studies of the Codex is an evaluation of its three 'texts': the Nahuatl-language alphabetic text, the Spanish-language annotations including loose translations, and its bountiful images. Two sources served as iterative kinds of drafts for the Codex project: the Primeros memoriales (1558–1561) and the Manuscrito de Tlatelolco (1561–1566). Each of the manuscripts contains its own three texts, thus they are threefold, that enable an examination of nine separate but interrelated source texts. In considering the differences among the cumulative nine texts, this article uncovers new insights into an unstudied process of negotiation between the Nahua scholars, the elders whom they consulted, and their Spanish colleagues. As sites of mediation among colonial actors, the threefold manuscripts manifest on their folios the competing interests and agendas that shaped the production of knowledge in New Spain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. "The Bathed Ones": Transformation into Gods among the Precontact Nahua.
- Author
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Madajczak, Julia
- Subjects
- *
NAHUAS , *BATHS , *SACRIFICE , *GODS - Abstract
In the sixteenth century, Fray Diego Durán gave rise to a scholarly myth that the primary purpose of Nahua ritual baths was "purification." This article deconstructs his interpretation, focusing on baths performed on deities' impersonators (ixiptla), and particularly the so-called tlaaltiltin, "bathed ones." It argues that "baths," which often consisted of merely sprinkling one's face with water, had, above all, a transformative power. In the case of deities' impersonators, they helped them change their ontological status, converting humans into gods and, sometimes, the other way around. The article concludes that the fabrication of a deity's ixiptla necessarily involved applying a special kind of liquid, different for every god. Like godly attires, these "waters" contained the god's traits or essence that enabled the transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. « Qui sont ces Indiens sauvages ? » À propos de la politique étrangère de quelques peuples d’Amazonie en isolement volontaire
- Author
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Peter Gow (1958-2021)
- Subjects
Amazonia ,Nahua ,Mashco Piro ,voluntary isolation ,warfare ,Social Sciences - Abstract
This paper is a reflection on the phenomenon of voluntary isolation in Amazonia, about anthropology’s implication in its formation as a concept, and what anthropologists might profitably say about it as a concrete phenomenon in the world. While knowledge based on ethnographic fieldwork might by minimal or even totally absent for people in voluntary isolation, anthropological research has produced a very impressive understanding of indigenous Amazonian social forms in general, knowledge that can be brought to bear on the question.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Entre lógicas cinegéticas y agrícolas: el chamanismo nahua en una cosmología de sacrificio
- Author
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David Lorente Fernández
- Subjects
shamanism ,cosmology ,sacrifice ,offerings ,water ,Nahua ,History of Civilization ,CB3-482 - Abstract
Mesoamerican forms of shamanism have rarely been discussed in international academic debates. Through ethnographic information collected in the Sierra de Texcoco, in Mexico, what might be called a Nahua shamanic tradition is analyzed in light of the interlacing of relationship modes conceptually associated with hunting and agriculture. Nahua shamanism relates to a sacrificial cosmology that places predation as the first moment of a cosmic cycle of agonistic exchange, whose moment of retribution is linked to rain and agricultural fertility. The specificity of Nahua shamanism lies precisely in this articulation of logics of a hunting and agricultural nature, involved in the definition all at once of the entities at work, of the specialist himself and of the dynamics that govern the exercise of cosmic politics.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Safe birth in cultural safety in southern Mexico: a pragmatic non-inferiority cluster-randomised controlled trial
- Author
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Iván Sarmiento, Sergio Paredes-Solís, Abraham de Jesús García, Nadia Maciel Paulino, Felipe René Serrano de los Santos, José Legorreta-Soberanis, Germán Zuluaga, Anne Cockcroft, and Neil Andersson
- Subjects
Community health worker ,Traditional birth attendant ,Randomised controlled trial ,Equity in access ,Aboriginal health ,Nahua ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Plain English summary In many Indigenous communities, traditional midwives support mothers during pregnancy, childbirth, and some days afterwards. Research involving traditional midwives has focused on training them in Western techniques and redefining their role to support Western care. In Guerrero state, Mexico, Indigenous mothers continue to trust traditional midwives. Almost half of these mothers still prefer traditional childbirths, at home, in the company of their families and following traditional practices. We worked with 30 traditional midwives to see if supporting their practice allowed traditional childbirth without worsening mothers’ health. Each traditional midwife received an inexpensive stipend, a scholarship for an apprentice and support from an intercultural broker. The official health personnel participated in a workshop to improve their attitudes towards traditional midwives. We compared 40 communities in two municipalities that received support for traditional midwifery with 40 communities in two municipalities that continued to receive usual services. We interviewed 872 women with childbirth between 2016 and 2017. Mothers in intervention communities suffered fewer complications during childbirth and had fewer complications or deaths of their babies. They had more traditional childbirths and fewer perineal tears or infections across home-based childbirths. Among those who went to Western care, mothers in intervention communities had more traditional management of the placenta but more non-traditional cold-water baths. Supporting traditional midwifery increased traditional childbirth without worsening health outcomes. The small size of participating populations limited our confidence about the size of this difference. Health authorities could promote better health outcomes if they worked with traditional midwives instead of replacing them.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Conservation of Biocultural Diversity in the Huasteca Potosina Region, Mexico.
- Author
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Pensado-Leglise, Mario del Roble, Luna-Vargas, Salvador, and Bustamante-Ramírez, Hilda Angélica
- Subjects
- *
TROPICAL dry forests , *TROPICAL forests , *ETHNICITY , *BIODIVERSITY , *CULTURAL landscapes , *ETHNIC groups - Abstract
The Huasteca Potosina region has a relevant landscape heritage of biocultural diversity, due to high biological diversity and the presence of the Teenek (Huastec Mayan), Nahua, and Xi'iuy (Pame) ethnic groups. The object of this study is to analyze, among the different cultural groups of the region, how the performances of the relevant Socioecological Systems (SESs) influence the conservation of biocultural diversity. Quantitative approaches are used to determine the expected trends of indices (Informant Consensus Factor, ICF; Cultural Importance Index, CII; Shannon–Wiener Biodiversity Index, SWI) commonly used in the ethnobotanical field. Data of the main domestic forest species used by the groups mentioned above were collected in 2021. We analyzed the SES profile for each of the ethnic groups and a mestizo group, as well as their relationship with the biome they mainly inhabit and the domestic functions fulfilled by the ethnobotanical species. As a result, we found that the low deciduous forest and the sub-evergreen tropical forest biomes, which co-evolved mainly with the Nahua and the Teenek SESs, present higher diversity and effective use of species so that offer better chances for conserving the landscape heritage of biocultural diversity. Otherwise, the results also show the critical nature regarding the biomes inhabited by the Pame and the mestizo's SESs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Safe birth in cultural safety in southern Mexico: a pragmatic non-inferiority cluster-randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Sarmiento, Iván, Paredes-Solís, Sergio, de Jesús García, Abraham, Maciel Paulino, Nadia, Serrano de los Santos, Felipe René, Legorreta-Soberanis, José, Zuluaga, Germán, Cockcroft, Anne, and Andersson, Neil
- Abstract
Background: Available research on the contribution of traditional midwifery to safe motherhood focuses on retraining and redefining traditional midwives, assuming cultural prominence of Western ways. Our objective was to test if supporting traditional midwives on their own terms increases cultural safety (respect of Indigenous traditions) without worsening maternal health outcomes.Methods: Pragmatic parallel-group cluster-randomised controlled non-inferiority trial in four municipalities in Guerrero State, southern Mexico, with Nahua, Na savi, Me'phaa and Nancue ñomndaa Indigenous groups. The study included all pregnant women in 80 communities and 30 traditional midwives in 40 intervention communities. Between July 2015 and April 2017, traditional midwives and their apprentices received a monthly stipend and support from a trained intercultural broker, and local official health personnel attended a workshop for improving attitudes towards traditional midwifery. Forty communities in two control municipalities continued with usual health services. Trained Indigenous female interviewers administered a baseline and follow-up household survey, interviewing all women who reported pregnancy or childbirth in all involved municipalities since January 2016. Primary outcomes included childbirth and neonatal complications, perinatal deaths, and postnatal complications, and secondary outcomes were traditional childbirth (at home, in vertical position, with traditional midwife and family), access and experience in Western healthcare, food intake, reduction of heavy work, and cost of health care.Results: Among 872 completed pregnancies, women in intervention communities had lower rates of primary outcomes (perinatal deaths or childbirth or neonatal complications) (RD -0.06 95%CI - 0.09 to - 0.02) and reported more traditional childbirths (RD 0.10 95%CI 0.02 to 0.18). Among institutional childbirths, women from intervention communities reported more traditional management of placenta (RD 0.34 95%CI 0.21 to 0.48) but also more non-traditional cold-water baths (RD 0.10 95%CI 0.02 to 0.19). Among home-based childbirths, women from intervention communities had fewer postpartum complications (RD -0.12 95%CI - 0.27 to 0.01).Conclusions: Supporting traditional midwifery increased culturally safe childbirth without worsening health outcomes. The fixed population size restricted our confidence for inference of non-inferiority for mortality outcomes. Traditional midwifery could contribute to safer birth among Indigenous communities if, instead of attempting to replace traditional practices, health authorities promoted intercultural dialogue.Trial Registration: Retrospectively registered ISRCTN12397283 . Trial status: concluded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The feast of Toxcatl in the Florentine Codex: ekphrasis as etiology and preservation.
- Author
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Nelson, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
EKPHRASIS , *NAHUAS ,NEW Spain - Abstract
Ekphrasis, understood as a metaphor for encounter, serves as a literal vessel for an encounter between Nahua and Spanish worldviews in the illustrated bilingual Spanish and Nahuatl encyclopedia Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (mostly written 1547–78), overseen by Bernardino de Sahagún in collaboration with Nahua scholars. Crucially, the function of ekphrasis—intensified verbal description of visual artifice—differed between Spanish and Nahua users of the encyclopedia, both in general and in this context. The twin missions of the text, to diagnose Nahua deviance from Christianity, and to record the Nahua world and its practices, directly conflict. This essay examines the differences between the side-by-side Spanish and Nahuatl accounts of a major Mexica ceremony, Toxcatl, with a special focus on rhetorical discrepancies between the two. It also argues that the unusually explicitly gruesome illustrations of this section may have functioned differently for the two audiences: as iconographic aids to identification of idolatrous ritual for the Spanish, but for a Nahua audience as ongoing ekphrasis-prompts, extending the ritual. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Conservation of Biocultural Diversity in the Huasteca Potosina Region, Mexico
- Author
-
Mario del Roble Pensado-Leglise, Salvador Luna-Vargas, and Hilda Angélica Bustamante-Ramírez
- Subjects
landscape heritage ,biocultural diversity ,socioecological systems ,ethnobotany ,Teenek ,Nahua ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The Huasteca Potosina region has a relevant landscape heritage of biocultural diversity, due to high biological diversity and the presence of the Teenek (Huastec Mayan), Nahua, and Xi’iuy (Pame) ethnic groups. The object of this study is to analyze, among the different cultural groups of the region, how the performances of the relevant Socioecological Systems (SESs) influence the conservation of biocultural diversity. Quantitative approaches are used to determine the expected trends of indices (Informant Consensus Factor, ICF; Cultural Importance Index, CII; Shannon–Wiener Biodiversity Index, SWI) commonly used in the ethnobotanical field. Data of the main domestic forest species used by the groups mentioned above were collected in 2021. We analyzed the SES profile for each of the ethnic groups and a mestizo group, as well as their relationship with the biome they mainly inhabit and the domestic functions fulfilled by the ethnobotanical species. As a result, we found that the low deciduous forest and the sub-evergreen tropical forest biomes, which co-evolved mainly with the Nahua and the Teenek SESs, present higher diversity and effective use of species so that offer better chances for conserving the landscape heritage of biocultural diversity. Otherwise, the results also show the critical nature regarding the biomes inhabited by the Pame and the mestizo’s SESs.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Reading Between the Lines: An Indigenous Account of Conquest on the Missing Folios of Codex Azcatitlan
- Author
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Angela Herren Rajagopalan
- Subjects
conquest ,manuscripts ,colonial ,nahua ,mexico ,History of Portugal ,DP501-900.22 ,History of Spain ,DP1-402 ,Latin America. Spanish America ,F1201-3799 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Sometime between 1565 and 1743, three folios were removed from the central Mexican manuscript known as Codex Azcatitlan. Two of the missing folios were part of section referring to the conquest history in this manuscript. Through an analysis of extant images and the comparison with other indigenous accounts of the conquest, this study makes an argument for the possible content on these pages and proposes that the missing folios recorded significant sacrificial events and acts of violence against the Spaniards that were of great importance to the indigenous Tlatelolca authors and their intended indigenous audience. This paper argues that those images that might have been considered most offensive to a Spanish Christian viewer were excised, at a time when censorship was on the rise in New Spain.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. El origen del maíz en relación a los dos géneros y la creación de la tierra fértil en el mito de Tlaltecuhtli.
- Author
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Peretti, Leda
- Subjects
- *
MOTHERS , *CORN , *MYTH , *SACRIFICE , *YOUNG men , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *GODS , *GODDESSES - Abstract
In the modern maize myths of the Mayan area and the Gulf Coast where the protagonist is a woman, it is established that her sacrifice, usually carried out by the Sun, is the necessary event to transform what she contains at the potential level into concrete goods, that is corn. However, in cases where the protagonist is male, his death, brought on by his grandmother or his mother, is what makes the young man's transformation into the maize god possible. In a similar vein, Mexica culture establishes that it is the sacrifice of the primal female entity, performed by male deities, which creates the fertile earth in the cosmogonist myth of Tlaltecuhtli, of which a new reading is proposed. This transformation of the female telluric matter into fruitful land in the myth has a masculine valence. Congruently, it had to be a man who wore the skin of the goddess Toci after her sacrifice and flaying in the month Ochpaniztli to propitiate the periodic regeneration of vegetation and in primis of maize. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. LOS OJOS DE LA CARA, LA CARA DE LAS HOJAS: LOS SIGNIFICADOS CONFLICTIVOS DE IXTLAMA TILISTLI.
- Author
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Coon, Adam W.
- Subjects
- *
DRAMATISTS , *NAHUAS , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *HUASTEC (Mexican people) , *MAYAS - Abstract
In this article I analyze Nahua playwright Ildefonso Maya's theatrical work Ixtlamatinij (1987). The Nahuatl term ixtlamatini, in the Huasteca, has two meanings that clash with one another. It can denote a person who has gained knowledge through lived experience, or instead someone who has obtained knowledge through university education. I argue that the conflictive meanings of ixtlamatini are key to understanding how Maya stages Nahua perspectives as valid intellectual production. In doing so, he proposes a wider conception of what constitutes a text, of what has ixtli (face): ceremonies, the environment, clothing, and language as a metonym of the face. The work Ixtlamatinij defends Nahua practices as an effective strategy to dismantle the discrimination aimed against Native nations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
14. Pluriversalidad exitosa: epistemologías y ontologías de los maseualmej del municipio Cuetzalan, México
- Author
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Patricia Zuckerhut
- Subjects
Pluriversalidad ,maseualmej ,Cuetzalan/México ,identidad ,Nahua ,maíz ,café ,resistencia ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
La población indígena de Cuetzalan, México, tiene las características de aquellas que habitan territorios fronterizos desde hace siglos, fronterizos en el sentido de Gloria Anzaldúa, dado que siempre tiene que adaptarse a nuevas condiciones para sobrevivir como gente indígena. El artículo analiza esas adaptaciones como formas/lógicas de pluriversalidad, es decir, los maseualmej (sg. maseual) juntan la epistemología y ontología occidental hegemónica con una epistemología y ontología indígena. Usan las nuevas condiciones, introducidas por la sociedad nacional capitalista, como recurso en su resistencia contra su desposesión (de bienes, de conocimientos, de identidad, etc.). Mantienen su existencia e identidad como comunidad indígena porque conectan las dos lógicas y no las separan. El análisis se basa en investigación de campo de uno a tres meses en cada estancia entre 2003 y 2017 con observaciones participantes, conversaciones informales, así como entrevistas formales. El fundamento de mi análisis son las teorías del sistema mundo, de la colonialidad de poder y la teoría antropóloga de la persona.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Calling through the water jar: Domestic objects in Nahua emotional assemblages.
- Author
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Raby, Dominique
- Subjects
INTERSUBJECTIVITY ,ANTHROPOMORPHISM ,ACTOR-network theory ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ONTOLOGY - Abstract
This article re-examines human–object relations in an Indigenous Nahua context in Mexico. Inspired by the Deleuzian notion of assemblage, the study shifts the focus from the agency of objects to emphasize the emotions of human and nonhuman animals as "persons." Artifacts like clothes and water jars emerge as intersubjective connectors that transfer human substance and voice in short-lived, but emotionally charged, domestic assemblages. The focus on quasi-plain domestic artifacts defines love, the Nahuas' mode of relating, and motherhood, as central to their understanding while, more broadly, reframing the status of objects beyond anthropomorphism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Tepahtihquetl pan ce pilaltepetzin / A Village Healer.
- Author
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de la Cruz, Sabina Cruz
- Subjects
- *
NATIVE language , *NAHUAS , *HEALTH of indigenous peoples , *ETHNOHISTORY - Abstract
Sabina Cruz de la Cruz presents an auto-ethnohistory, an account written in her native language of Nahuatl based on her community experiences with illness and curing in the Huasteca region of Veracruz, Mexico. She documents her work with two curanderos to improve her poor health. The article is an invaluable record of contemporary, indigenous healing dialogue and traditions, some of which have similarities with colonial-era practices. It is an example of a collaboration between an ethnohistorian and an indigenous scholar writing her own history, and such collaborations will strengthen the field of ethnohistory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Les reptiles dans les savoirs et l'imaginaire des Nahuas/Maseualmej de la Sierra Norte de Puebla (Mexique).
- Author
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Beaucage, Pierre, Oral Totamachilis, Taller de Tradición, Rojas Mora, Xanath, Woolrich Piña, Guillermo Alfonso, Mora Guzman, Ezequiel, and López Salgado, Erika
- Abstract
Copyright of Recherches Amérindiennes au Québec is the property of Société Recherches autochtones au Québec and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Tradición oral nahua contemporánea y mapas coloniales.
- Author
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Macuil Martínez, Raul
- Subjects
- *
ORAL tradition , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *COMMUNITIES , *CITIES & towns , *ANCESTORS , *GENEALOGY - Abstract
The present work analyzes the transmission of the oral tradition of the indigenous peoples during the colonial and contemporary period and how it was documented in manuscripts, canvases, maps, and genealogies. In these documents, a part of the vision of the Mesoamerican world was expressed: the ritual life, the sacred discourses, the cult of the ancestors and the gods that live in the areas surrounding the towns and in the hills that are considered sacred. One of the main premises that will guide this work is this: the indigenous communities are entities that produce knowledge, a part of which we can see documented in their documentation. The community's oral narrative is what guides the tlacuiloque ('scribes') in the representation of their history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Reading Between the Lines: An Indigenous Account of Conquest on the Missing Folios of Codex Azcatitlan.
- Author
-
RAJAGOPALAN, ANGELA HERREN
- Subjects
CHRISTIANS ,RELIGIOUS adherents ,CATHOLICS ,CHRISTIANITY ,MANUSCRIPTS ,SPANIARDS - Abstract
Copyright of IBEROAMERICANA. América Latina - España - Portugal is the property of Vervuert Verlag and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
20. MISCELÁNEA NUMERAL DIACRÓNICA Y TIPOLÓGICA CON REFLEXIONES SOBRE EL LIBRO DE ALEXANDRE.
- Author
-
Marcos Marín, Francisco
- Subjects
NUMERALS ,LOANWORDS ,CHINESE people ,AUTHORS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Iberoamericana de Lingüística is the property of Universitas Castellae and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
21. Una aproximació a l’ús de la llengua nahua al lloc de treball a l’estat de Veracruz
- Author
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Miguel Figueroa Saavedra
- Subjects
mercat de treball ,llengua indígena ,educació intercultural ,nahua ,Mèxic. ,Language and Literature ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Social Sciences ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
Aquest article presenta un estudi exploratori sobre la presència i l’ús de la llengua nahua en l’espai de treball i el valor que té aquest ús dins del mercat laboral local. Es va realitzar un estudi de cas entrevistant quaranta-nou titulats de la Universitat Veracruzana Intercultural (Mèxic). Entre els principals resultats es destaca que, malgrat els fenòmens de discriminació i desplaçament, els treballadors estudiats van manifestar fer un ús oral i escrit del nahua en la seva activitat laboral, i la seva condició de parlants va ser considerada pels seus ocupadors com a necessària i important per a l’acompliment de les seves funcions. Això suposa que una formació professional pertinent i el desenvolupament de la funció laboral del nahua actuen de manera positiva en la seva revaloració. Aquest estudi també mostra les possibilitats d’investigar les llengües minoritzades de Mèxic des de la dimensió laboral de cara a una planificació lingüística integral. Paraules clau: mercat de treball, llengua indígena, educació intercultural, nahua, Mèxic.
- Published
- 2018
22. Winds, heart, and heat in premodern Franciscan and Nahua concepts of 'soul'.
- Author
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Bultman, Dana
- Subjects
- *
NAHUAS , *COLONIZATION , *FRANCISCAN missions - Abstract
The Tercer abecedario espiritual (1527) was the most influential work of Franciscan friar and widely read spiritual author Francisco de Osuna (c.1492-c.1540). This essay focuses on descriptions of the soul in his treatise in order to highlight a series of correspondences between Nahua and Franciscan metaphysics. It argues that these correspondences, based on sensorial experiences of the material world and inductive reasoning, aided the success of the Franciscan project of evangelization during the early decades of the colonization of Mexico through the 1570s. Moreover, it contends they led to changes in the concept of the soul in the Nahua/Spanish contact zone. Because Nahua terms for animating forces ihiyotl, -yolia, and tonalli—which signify winds, heart, and heat—have been studied in close detail, this essay uses them as a framework to interrogate Osuna's representations. Such an approach demonstrates that scholarship comparing Mesoamerican metaphysics with that of colonizing missionaries requires reciprocal scrutiny of European concepts at the time of contact. Finally, this analysis explores Bruno Latour's 'compositionism' as a model for approaching the premodern qualities of meditative recollection and for examining the intersections between Nahua and Franciscan aesthetics of interiority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. "I Am Just a Tiçitl": Decolonizing Central Mexican Nahua Female Healers, 1535-1635.
- Author
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Polanco, Edward Anthony
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN healers , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *NAHUAS -- Social life & customs , *MESOAMERICAN civilization , *HEALING - Abstract
Since the sixteenth century, Central Mexican tiçiyotl (Nahua healing knowledge) has been portrayed as a male-dominated system akin to Western medicine. This has made Nahua women invisible in broader discussions of tiçiyotl. Though the historiography acknowledges that women were titiçih (healing ritual specialists), the scholarship has primarily focused on their role in midwifery. This article first uses early modern Spanish dictionaries to underscore discrepancies in the vocabulary used to describe indigenous healers. Then, using evidence from two sixteenth-century proceedings against Nahua women in Central Mexico (in conjunction with other primary sources), this article demonstrates that female titiçih were not analogous to Spanish midwives. Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century female titiçih-like their ancestors-were practitioners of tiçiyotl who gazed into water, hurled corn kernels, applied salubrious materials, and communicated with deities through entheogenic substances to keep their communities whole. Moreover, this article argues that scholarship must decolonize tiçiyotl in order to explore and understand its complexities. This can only be achieved by moving away from Western terms and frameworks that do not adequately describe Nahua ideologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. La Crónica X: sus interpretaciones y propuestas.
- Author
-
Battcock, Clementina
- Abstract
Copyright of Orbis Tertius is the property of Universidad Nacional de La Plata and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Cacicas, Escribanos, and Landholders: Indigenous Women's Late Colonial Mexican Texts, 1703-1832.
- Author
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Melton-Villanueva, Miriam
- Subjects
- *
NAHUAS , *INDIGENOUS women , *NOTARIES , *REAL property sales & prices , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
Indigenous escribanos, notaries, based in the western part of what is now Mexico State, lived in small highland towns within the regions of Jilotepec and Metepec and wrote the documents studied here. They wrote the land sales, testaments, financial instruments, and powers of attorney for the women featured in this article. Their records described a cross-section of women participating in the civic work of their communities; identified cacicas, women of position in northern small towns (Jilotepec region) in the late colonial eighteenth-century; and showed the proportion of Nahua women who controlled land in southern small towns (Metepec region) within the extant early nineteenth-century testamentary record. Further, language data from these women's records serve to restore local meanings of land and society. Taken together, the evidence disputes the narrative of decline and indicates escribanos, indigenous male officials, acknowledged and fostered women's status and autonomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Aztec hieroglyphics: a name-based writing system.
- Author
-
Whittaker, Gordon
- Subjects
AZTEC hieroglyphics ,AZTECS -- History ,HIEROGLYPHICS ,NAHUATL names ,ONOMASTICS ,INSCRIPTIONS ,SIXTEENTH century - Abstract
The system of writing employed by the Aztec Empire and its immediate neighbours in early 16th-century Mesoamerica has a number of characteristics that make it highly unusual in comparative perspective. Among them is the fact that it was almost entirely restricted to the recording of names or, more precisely, of personal and place names, titles and professions. All other areas of information were recorded by means of iconography and a numeral-based notation system. This article will discuss the nature of Aztec names and the manner in which they are recorded in Aztec writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A comparison of contributions from the Aztec cities of Tlatelolco and Tenochtitlan to the bird chapter of the Florentine Codex.
- Author
-
Haemig, Paul D.
- Subjects
- *
NAHUATL language , *ORNITHOLOGY , *WATER birds - Abstract
The Florentine Codex is a Renaissance-era illuminated manuscript that contains the earliest-known regional work on the birds of México. Its Nahuatl language texts and scholia (the latter later incorporated into its Spanish texts) were written in the 1560s by Bernardino de Sahagún's research group of elite native Mexican scholars in collaboration with Aztecs from two cities: Tlatelolco and Tenochtitlan. In the present study, I compared the contributions from these two cities and found many differences. While both cities contributed accounts and descriptions of land and water birds, those from Tlatelolco were mainly land birds, while those from Tenochtitlan were mainly water birds. Tlatelolco contributed over twice as many bird accounts as Tenochtitlan, and supplied the only information about medicinal uses of birds. Tenochtitlan peer reviewed the Tlatelolco bird accounts and improved many of them. In addition, Tenochtitlan contributed all information on bird abundance and most information about which birds were eaten and not eaten by humans. Spanish bird names appear more frequently in the Aztec language texts from Tenochtitlan. Content analysis of the Tenochtitlan accounts suggests collaboration with the water folk Atlaca (a prehistoric lacustrine culture) and indigenous contacts with Spanish falconers. The Renaissance-era studies of Sahagún's research group, on a now lost island in the formerly vast, bird-rich wetlands of the Valley of México, constitute the birth of Mexican ornithology and, coincidently, give the history of Mexican ornithology a distinctive, Aztlán-like beginning, significantly different from the ornithological histories of neighboring countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Kaffee, Mais und Feste: Die Verschränkung gemeinschaftlichen Subsistenzanbaus mit der Schaffung von Gemeinschaft und marktwirtschaftlicher Wirtschaftsweise bei nahuatsprachigen Indigenen in Mexiko.
- Author
-
Zuckerhut, Patricia
- Abstract
Copyright of SWS - Rundschau is the property of Verein fur interdisziplinare sozialwissenschaftliche Studien und Analysen and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
29. Before American History
- Author
-
Mucher, Christen
- Subjects
settler colonialism ,nationalism ,antiquarianism ,Indigenous dispossession ,Sun Stone ,New Spain ,Mexico ,earthworks ,mound builders ,Cahokia ,Aztecas ,Nahua ,creole intellectuals ,Lorenzo Benaduci ,Francisco Clavijero ,Thomas Jefferson ,Benjamin Smith Barton ,Caleb Atwater ,bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBJ Regional & national history::HBJK History of the Americas ,bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBT History: specific events & topics::HBTQ Colonialism & imperialism ,bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBA History: theory & methods::HBAH Historiography - Abstract
Before American History juxtaposes Mexico City’s famous carved Sun Stone with the mounded earthworks found throughout the Midwestern states of the U.S. to examine the project of settler nationalism from the 1780s to the 1840s in two North American republics usually studied separately. As the U.S. and Mexico transformed from European colonies into independent nations—and before war scarred them both—antiquarians and historians compiled and interpreted archives meant to document America’s Indigenous pasts. These settler-colonial understandings of North America’s past deliberately misappropriated Indigenous histories and repurposed them and their material objects as "American antiquities," thereby writing Indigenous pasts out of U.S. and Mexican national histories and national lands and erasing and denigrating Native peoples living in both nascent republics.Christen Mucher creatively recovers the Sun Stone and mounded earthworks as archives of nationalist power and Indigenous dispossession as well as objects that are, at their material base, produced by Indigenous people but settler controlled and settler interpreted. Her approach renders visible the foundational methodologies, materials, and mythologies that created an American history out of and on top of Indigenous worlds and facilitated Native dispossession continent-wide. By writing Indigenous actors out of national histories, Mexican and U.S. elites also wrote them out of their lands, a legacy of erasure and removal that continues when we repeat these eighteenth- and nineteenth-century settler narratives and that reverberates in discussions of immigration, migration, and Nativism today.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Debt as a double-edged risk: A historical case from Nahua (Aztec) Mexico.
- Author
-
Millhauser, John K.
- Subjects
- *
DEBT , *FINANCIAL risk , *NAHUAS , *AZTECS , *SLAVERY - Abstract
Debt is one of the oldest and most widespread social arrangements that humans use to manage hardship--and it has also been one of the riskiest. David Graeber convincingly makes this case in his recent study of debt over the last five thousand years, but his focus on the Old World leaves open the question of whether similar contradictions emerged among the markets, cities, and states of the Americas. This article uses sixteenth-century documents to reconstruct the practices, institutions, and morality of debt in Nahua society during the Aztec Empire (AD 1428-1521) and show how debt was a double-edged risk in the Aztec economy. Debt played a constructive role, helping some households through hard times and carrying little of the negative moral valence commonly associated with it. However, debts could create new vulnerabilities when secured by selling family members into slavery. Exploitative debt, however, may have only become a problem during economic and environmental crises that made the risks of debt seem less than the risks of other ways to deal with hardship. Without careful attention to cultural context and historical circumstances, generalizations about debt's exploitative aspects are limited in their ability to explain debt's global extent and historical persistence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Methodological challenges involved in compiling the Nahua pharmacopeia.
- Author
-
De Vos, Paula
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of science , *HISTORY of pharmacology , *PHARMACY -- History , *SCIENTIFIC knowledge , *HISTORY of imperialism , *HISTORY - Abstract
Recent work in the history of science has questioned the Eurocentric nature of the field and sought to include a more global approach that would serve to displace center–periphery models in favor of approaches that take seriously local knowledge production. Historians of Iberian colonial science have taken up this approach, which involves reliance on indigenous knowledge traditions of the Americas. These traditions present a number of challenges to modern researchers, including availability and reliability of source material, issues of translation and identification, and lack of systematization. This essay explores the challenges that emerged in the author’s attempt to compile a pre-contact Nahua pharmacopeia, the reasons for these challenges, and the ways they may – or may not – be overcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Desnudez y pudor entre los nahuas prehispánicos.
- Author
-
López Hernández, Miriam
- Abstract
This article studies four perspectives of nakedness. First of all, nakedness as a manifestation of shamelessness and as a sexual transgression. This enables us to move forward in the understanding of the conception of body among the ancient Nahua. Secondly, it is examined as humiliation, punishment and mockery of the person. The lack of clothing is not just a sign of degradation, it also implies a depersonalization. Thirdly, the subject of the intimidating naked body is discussed. For the most part, we focus our attention on the exposure of the female sexual organs. Men are afraid of beautiful and seductive women because the latter can kill the ingenuous who desire them and wish to possess them. Lastly, nakedness is expounded as part of ritual event. In this case, the lack of clothing is a necessary step for transitioning into another status. Nakedness is conceived of as a new birth, an origin, something new. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Interdependencia y economía de dones. La 'ayuda' (quipalehuiya) como forma económica básica entre los nahuas, México
- Author
-
Yuribia Velázquez Galindo
- Subjects
Reciprocity ,Nahua ,economic interdependency ,social networks ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Based on ethnographic data collected from 1993 to date, I seek to demonstrate that contemporary Nahua develop certain aspects of their lives in the context of an economy of gifts. Nahua reciprocity expresses this in the basic economic form of "aid", called quipalehuiya locally. I argue that this "aid", given as goods or services, is reciprocated through social networks and provides a foundation for the model of interdependence that completely links this population with its social and ecological environment.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. EL SILENCIO DEL TRADUCTOR
- Author
-
Tomás Serrano Coronado
- Subjects
México ,Sahagún ,historia ,identidad ,cultura ,nahua ,traductor ,Mexico ,history ,identity ,culture ,Nahua ,translator ,Translating and interpreting ,P306-310 - Abstract
Resumen: La historia de México registra entre sus varios protagonistas a personajes célebres por los hechos gloriosos o vergonzosos en que participaron. Mi intención en este artículo es mostrar a través del trabajo de Fray Bernardino de Sahagún, lo que parece incuestionable: la función del traductor en la construcción de la historia, la identidad y la cultura de un pueblo. En el caso que tratamos aquí se trata de la trascendencia que la obra de Sahagún ha tenido para un mejor conocimiento de la cultura nahua. Palabras clave: México, Sahagún, historia, identidad, cultura, nahua, traductor. THE SILENCE OF THE TRANSLATOR Abstract: The history of Mexico has among its various protagonists celebrities on account of either the glorious or the shameful events in which they got involved. My intention in this article is to show by means of the work of Fray Bernardino de Sahagun, a fact that seems certain: the role of the translator in the construction of the history, the identity, and the culture of a people. In the case discussed here we shall be dealing with the importance that Sahagun's work has had for a better understanding of the Nahua culture. Keywords: Mexico, Sahagún, history, identity, culture, Nahua, translator. LE SILENCE DU TRADUCTEUR Résumé : L'histoire du Mexique compte parmi ses célébrités différents protagonistes, en raison de leur participation soit dans des événements glorieux ou bien honteux. Mon intention dans cet article est de montrer par le biais de l'œuvre de Fray Bernardino de Sahagun, ce qui paraît certaine: le rôle du traducteur dans la construction de l'histoire, l'identité et la culture d'un peuple. Dans le cas évoqué ici, nous serons centrés sur l'importance du travail de Sahagun pour une meilleure compréhension de la culture nahua. Mots-clés : Mexique, Sahagún, histoire, identité, culture, Nahuas, traducteur.
- Published
- 2013
35. El tícitl en la cultura náhuatl del Posclásico.
- Author
-
Andalón González, Mónica Guadalupe
- Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of the ability of the Nahua tícitl (Pre-Hispanic Medics) regarding diagnosis and treatment in the Postclassic period. The tícitl related their medical theory with magical elements, probably leading to the practice of empirical and cosmogonic medicine. This study allowed us to clarify that the various medical specialties reflect the art of healing of the tícitl, as well as the progress in the development of medicine, which is why the tícitl occupies an important role in Nahuatl society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
36. Construire «par le bas» un patrimoine graphique ethnique en situation transnationale (Mexique-USA).
- Author
-
Hémond, Aline
- Abstract
Copyright of Autrepart is the property of Presses de Sciences Po and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Pipil Writing: An Archaeology of Prototypes and a Political Economy of Literacy.
- Author
-
Sampeck, Kathryn E.
- Subjects
- *
PIPIL (Central American people) , *PIPIL language , *INDIGENOUS peoples of Central America -- Languages , *CACAO , *LITERACY , *LOGOGRAPHY ,WRITING - Abstract
This article will explore how Pipil writing compares to better-known Central Mexican pictorial manuscripts. The sole evidence for preconquest writing in this region was presented in the seventeenth century by Don Francisco Antonio de Fuentes y Guzmán through his drawings and descriptions in the chronicle Recordación Florida. In the process of re- presentation, these remnants underwent alterations due to clerical errors, interpretive errors, and errors arising from a mixing or blending of texts. The manuscript of Recordación Florida contains images that were never published, erasures, and marginalia. Three writing genres are identifiable, and the content of these writings has an unusual emphasis on ways to represent money and counts of commodities, particularly cacao. The Pipil demonstrated their independence from the Mixtec and Aztec empires through writing by using a distinctive style to record sovereign political and financial affairs, an example of the Mesoamerican emphasis on authority--the ability to inscribe and draw upon and mobilize relevance and meaning--as the foundation for creating and maintaining a lettered polity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. ITINERARI TERAPEUTICI PLURALI.
- Author
-
IORIO, SILVIA
- Subjects
- *
NAHUAS , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *MEDICAL anthropology , *INDIGENOUS peoples of Mexico , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This article addresses the strategies employed by Nahua community of Mexixo to deal with health problems. Drawing on qualitative research, it discusses the choice of plural therapeutic itineraries, including the use of informal and formal healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
39. UNO STUDIO ETNOGRAFICO DELLE PRATICHE E DEI SAPERI MEDICI NEL CONTESTO NAHUA (NAUPAN, PUEBLA, MESSICO).
- Author
-
IORIO, SILVIA
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *HEALTH facilities , *MEDICINE , *COMMUNICABLE disease treatment , *PREVENTION of epidemics , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article focuses on a study conducted on varous developments in medical practices and knowledge in Nauha, Mexico. Topics discussed include the dialogue established between national health institutions and the population of various disadvantaged areas of Mexico; incorporation of biomedical tradition into new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies of Mexico; and the use of biomedicine for the treatment of infectious diseases and preventing epidemics.
- Published
- 2014
40. Ethnobotany of Mexican and northern Central American cycads (Zamiaceae)
- Author
-
Bonta, Mark, Pulido-Silva, María Teresa, Diego-Vargas, Teresa, Vite-Reyes, Aurelia, Vovides, Andrew P., and Cibrián-Jaramillo, Angélica
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Elementy duchowe w wierzeniach rdzennych Nahua z gór Zongolica w Meksyku.
- Author
-
Michalik, Piotr Grzegorz
- Abstract
This paper discusses beliefs associated with human spiritual elements (often called "souls") held by the indigenous Nahua from Sierra Zongolica, Mexico. Spiritual elements, such as tonalli, nawalli, and yolotl form part of a complex of correlated and often overlapping concepts. Such semantic intricacy related to the notion of a spiritual element is not just a local peculiarity of Sierra Zongolica. It appears in ethnographic data concerning other Nahuatl speaking areas, as well as in early colonial sources. Therefore, the case of Nahua beliefs constitutes a challenge to monosemantic, unambiguous definitions of Mesoamerican indigenous concepts of human spiritual elements, as presented by many anthropologists and ethnohistorians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Indoamericanismos de uso general en documentos españoles americanos (1502–1560): propuesta de clasificación y resultados.
- Author
-
Cáceres-Lorenzo, Ma Teresa
- Subjects
- *
16TH century Native American history , *URBAN history , *AMERICANISMS , *NATIVE American commerce , *HISTORICAL source material ,SPANISH colonies - Abstract
From the start of the Spanish conquest of the Americas, a significant number of Amerindian voices can be found in chronicles and administrative texts. By 1560, the first American towns had already been founded. Colonial texts are thus sources for researching the presence of native voices in local or general use in America. As a result of an examination of these texts, I present the criteria used to creating a lexicon, as well as a qualitative/quantitative analysis of the causes which provoked the appearance of Indigenous Americanisms in different American areas; their relationship with commercial activities; and their preference for Caribbean voices. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Análisis del DNA mitocondrial antiguo y contemporáneo: un acercamiento a las relaciones genéticas en las poblaciones indígenas de Mesoamérica.
- Author
-
Oliver, Angélica González, Morales, Ernesto Garfias, García, Elizabeth Romero, de la Cruz Laina, María Isabel, Acuña Alonzo, Alín Patricia, Martínez, Mauricio Pérez, Solís, Fernando Sánchez, Corona Comunidad, Benjamín Cristian, Smith, David Glenn, and Torre Blanco, Y. Alfonso
- Subjects
- *
MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *OTOMANGUEAN languages , *MAZAHUA (Mexican people) , *OTOMI language , *MAZAHUA language - Abstract
In this study we analyzed the founding mitochondrial DNA (mtdna) haplogroups A, B, C and D in 108 contemporary Mazahua individuals and 73 Otomi from Estado de Mexico to understand the genetic relationship between these populations, and with other ancient and contemporary Mexican populations. The Mazahua and Otomi inhabit the same localities in Estado de Mexico, speak languages that belong to the Oto-Manguean linguistic family and show cultural and historic similarities. Our results showed that haplogroup B is the most frequent in Mazahua whereas haplogroup A is highest among the Otomi. Haplogroup C exhibit similar frequencies. Otomi population exhibits a low frequency of haplogroup D and includes individuals that do not belong to any of the four mtdna haplogroups, whereas all Mazahua individuals in our study belong to one of the four mtdna lineages studied. The Mazahua and Otomi populations from Mexico State are statistically different according the results of the chi square test (p ⩽ 0.05). The principal component analysis using the frequencies of four mtdna haplogroups suggests that Mazahua and Otomi had little or no maternal genetic flow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
44. INTERDEPENDENCIA Y ECONOMÍA DE DONES. LA "AYUDA" (QUIPALEHUIYA) COMO FORMA ECONÓMICA BÁSICA ENTRE LOS NAHUAS, MÉXICO.
- Author
-
VELAZQUEZ GALINDO, YURIBIA
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC research , *ETHNOLOGY , *SOCIAL networks , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Based on ethnographic data collected from 1993 to date, I seek to demonstrate that contemporary Nahua develop certain aspects of their lives in the context of an economy of gifts. Nahua reciprocity expresses this in the basic economic form of "aid", called quipalehuiya locally. I argue that this "aid", given as goods or services, is reciprocated through social networks and provides a foundation for the model of interdependence that completely links this population with its social and ecological environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. LOS ARTRÓPODOS MEDICINALES EN TRES FUENTES NOVOHISPANAS DEL SIGLO XVI.
- Author
-
Serrano-González, Rafael, Guerrero-Martínez, Fernando, Pichardo-Barreiro, Yohalli, and Serrano-Velázquez, Rafael
- Subjects
- *
ARTHROPODA , *HERBAL medicine , *TAXONOMY , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *INSECTS , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Arthropods, since prehispanic times, was been of great importance among the Mesoamerican peoples, both because of its biological characteristics and its cultural impact. Indigenous groups have generated a deep and systematic knowledge about the different arthropods that are distributed in our country, which is reflected in the use of these organisms for feeding and medicinal use, mainly. There are only a few studies of zootherapy on prehispanic and colonial sources, but this documents represents a vast body of ancient and traditional knowledge about nature, so it is necessary to carry out scientific studies about these muniment in order to understand the knowledge and use of resources involved in the processes of health and disease among people Nahua prehispanic and contemporary. This work aims to identify the arthropods as medicinal resource that are reported in the Florentine Codex, Libellus of Medicinalibus Indorum Herbis and Historia Natural de Nueva España. Such works were consulted and were extracted his texts in spanish which mentions the arthropods useful in Nahua medicine; biological works were reviewed and listed on such taxonomic sources. Eleven arthropods were reported in this study, belonging to fourteen taxonomic orders, to cure 35 diseases. Despite the scant mention of this faunal group in these sources, it is important to record the different uses of these organisms that were part of the biocultural heritage of the Nahua people. It is essential to realize further studies and comparisons between more sources, as this will allow to understand some of the current uses that are still being given to animals in mexican traditional medicine, particularly with arthropods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
46. Una aproximación al proceso de diversificación religiosa en un municipio nahua.
- Author
-
TERESA RODRÍGUEZ, MARÍA
- Published
- 2013
47. Taino, Nahua and Quechua Lexicons in the Spanish Chronicles (1492–1648): A Comparative Study of Their Degree of Incorporation.
- Author
-
Cáceres-Lorenzo, Mteresa
- Subjects
- *
LEXICON , *WRITTEN Spanish , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PIPIL language , *TAINO language , *ONLINE bibliographic searching - Abstract
The chronicles of the Indies, which were written in Spanish during the XVI and XVII centuries, incorporate a large number of indigenous loan-words. These expressions primarily represent Taino, Nahua and Quechua contributions. Previous studies of non-literary texts have demonstrated the characteristics of these indigenous-language contributions, which we attempt to corroborate or modify with a corpus of 24 chronicles written between 1492 and 1648. By noting the indigenous expressions within these chronicles through a bibliographic search, we reached the following conclusions: Taino terms are present in all of the chronicles, whereas similar percentages of Nahua and Quechua terms are used in the chronicle texts. There are differences between the number of expressions and the chroniclers' usage of them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Notions of rationality and value production in ecotourism: examples from a Mexican biosphere reserve.
- Author
-
Olson, ElizabethAnne
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL economics , *STRATEGIC planning , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ENVIRONMENTAL engineering , *ECOTOURISM - Abstract
In this paper, two unique ecotourism projects in the Sierra of Manantlán Biosphere Reserve in west central Mexico are analyzed in terms of the economic and ideological discourses they reflect. In this region, ecotourism is promoted as (1) a sustainable development platform that is purportedly (2) different from traditional tourism in terms of the socioeconomic and environmental impacts. Economic programs and initiatives with explicit goals of sustainable development and conservation can directly influence local productions of value of forest resources and ethnicity. Weber's ideas on formal and substantive rationalizations are used as points on a continuum, and taken together with Kapp's Theory of Social Costs, the economic and ideological values of ecotourism projects can be compared and analyzed. Using anthropological methods, the two examples illustrate distinct types of ecotourism projects found within a single biosphere reserve. The discourse of ecotourism and integration into global markets through ecotourism are shown to be iterative processes. Production of value in conservation and sustainable development projects is situational; no universal model of value or rationality accounts for the two ecotourism projects presented. Ecotourism schemas should not be viewed as strictly modes for conservation because of the complex social strategies that they embody. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Empezar de nuevo: migración femenina a Estados Unidos. Retornos y reinserción en la Sierra Norte de Puebla, México.
- Author
-
D'Aubeterre Buznego, María Eugenia
- Subjects
- *
MESTIZOS , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *EMIGRATION & immigration ,UNITED States emigration & immigration - Abstract
The conditions for the circulation of persons between Mexico and the United States have changed drastically in the last decade. The ways people return must be analyzed taking into consideration the specificity of the regions involved. The dynamic of departure and return in the so-called "historic" region of migration to the United States is conceived of in this article as an "ideal type," useful for comparing other experiences in areas where recent, comparatively late migratory flows accelerated in the 1990s. This article analyzes the return from North Carolina of indigenous and mestiza women to the municipality of Pahuatlán, Puebla. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
50. Entre tradition et guérison : Différenciation religieuse et nouvelles formes de sociabilité en contexte nahua.
- Author
-
Rodríguez, María Teresa
- Subjects
- *
NAHUAS , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIALIZATION , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
In the Nahua villages of the region of the High Mountains (in the centre of the state of Veracruz), a form of customary Catholicism and a scheme of social organisation which integrated the civic and the religious in a single symbolic universe predominated until the 1980s. If one could then already observe the presence of certain evangelical churches in some districts, the phenomenon of religious differentiation became increasingly visible in the 1990s in a context of crisis in relation to land, increasing social asymmetry and an intensification of transnational migrant fluxes. Based on a case study, this article illustrates the expansion of evangelical organisations, in particular Pentecostal ones, within the context of a redefinition of interethnic dynamics. The aim is to analyse the capacity of these organisations to provide new paths to autonomy and dissidence in the face of traditional cultural and political structures, and to show how they took part in the production of new forms of socialisation that promoted access to exogenous networks and a redefinition of one's relation to the ethnic space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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