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Haunted Monasteries: Troubling Indigenous Erasure in Early Colonial Mexican Architecture.

Authors :
Esquivel, Savannah
Source :
Arts (2076-0752); Apr2024, Vol. 13 Issue 2, p61, 24p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This essay examines the placement and displacement of Nahua labor in the architectural history of Mexico's early colonial monasteries. It takes as its point of departure the story of a ghost in the Tlaxcala monastery as told by a Franciscan missionary to analyze the discursive and spatial dimensions of emergent racial ideologies in Mexico's earliest Catholic missions. While the ghost's appearance signals the eruption of unresolved tensions between the missionaries and the Tlaxcalans in a cohabited religious complex, the specter also animates settler colonial domination. Cross-referencing Nahuatl and Franciscan documents reveal the ghost story as a whitewashed tale of monastic ritual life wherein the ghost effaces Indigenous labor at precisely the moments and places missionaries deemed it most threatening. In so doing, this study illuminates how racial ideologies were structured discursively and experientially at the missions and contributes to urgent debates about how the history and preservation of Catholic architecture in Mexico conceals and represses the lived experience of Indigenous peoples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20760752
Volume :
13
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Arts (2076-0752)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176877421
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020061