Indigenous Miracles: Nahua Authority in Colonial Mexico: First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies
Autor Edward W. Osowskien Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 sep 2010
While King Carlos I of Spain struggled to suppress the Protestant Reformation in the Old World, the Spanish turned to New Spain to promote the Catholic cause, unimpeded by the presence of the “false” Old World religions. To this end, Osowski writes, the Spanish “saw indigenous people as necessary protagonists in the anticipated triumph of the faith.” As the conversion of the indigenous people of Mexico proceeded in earnest, Catholic ritual became the medium through which indigenous leaders and Spaniards negotiated colonial hegemony.
Indigenous Miracles is about how the Nahua elite of central Mexico secured political legitimacy through the administration of public rituals centered on miraculous images of Christ the King. Osowski argues that these images were adopted as community symbols and furthermore allowed Nahua leaders to “represent their own kingship,” protecting their claims to legitimacy. This legitimacy allowed them to act collectively to prevent the loss of many aspects of their culture. Osowski demonstrates how a shared religion admitted the possibility of indigenous agency and new ethnic identities.
Consulting both Nahuatl and Spanish sources, Osowski strives to fill a gap in the history of the Nahuas from 1760 to 1810, a momentous time when previously sanctioned religious practices were condemned by the viceroys and archbishops of the Bourbon royal dynasty. His approach synthesizes ethnohistory and institutional history to create a fascinating account of how and why the Nahuas protected the practices and symbols they had appropriated under Hapsburg rule. Ultimately, Osowski’s account contributes to our understanding of the ways in which indigenous agency was negotiated in colonial Mexico.
Indigenous Miracles is about how the Nahua elite of central Mexico secured political legitimacy through the administration of public rituals centered on miraculous images of Christ the King. Osowski argues that these images were adopted as community symbols and furthermore allowed Nahua leaders to “represent their own kingship,” protecting their claims to legitimacy. This legitimacy allowed them to act collectively to prevent the loss of many aspects of their culture. Osowski demonstrates how a shared religion admitted the possibility of indigenous agency and new ethnic identities.
Consulting both Nahuatl and Spanish sources, Osowski strives to fill a gap in the history of the Nahuas from 1760 to 1810, a momentous time when previously sanctioned religious practices were condemned by the viceroys and archbishops of the Bourbon royal dynasty. His approach synthesizes ethnohistory and institutional history to create a fascinating account of how and why the Nahuas protected the practices and symbols they had appropriated under Hapsburg rule. Ultimately, Osowski’s account contributes to our understanding of the ways in which indigenous agency was negotiated in colonial Mexico.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780816528554
ISBN-10: 0816528551
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:3
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Seria First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies
ISBN-10: 0816528551
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:3
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Seria First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies
Notă biografică
Edward W. Osowski is a professor of history at John Abbott College in Montreal. He was awarded a Fulbright dissertation scholarship for Mexico in 1998 and co-edited Mexican History: A Primary Source Reader.
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: From Imperial Wonders to Indigenous Miracles
1 Ritual Burials at Origin Places in Chalco
2 Eighteenth-Century Remembrances of Miracles of Primordial Authority
3 Cracks in Incorruptibility and the Traveling Alms Collectors
4 Gender and the Spiritual Tax Collectors
5 Corpus Christi Arches and Authority in Mexico City
6 Triumphal Arches and Centurions in the Indigenous–Spanish Festival Economy
Conclusion: From Indigenous Miracles to Miracles of the Poor
Appendix: Order of Appearance of Corpus Christi Arches, Mexico City, 1777–1780, from Cathedral Side Door to Front Door
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: From Imperial Wonders to Indigenous Miracles
1 Ritual Burials at Origin Places in Chalco
2 Eighteenth-Century Remembrances of Miracles of Primordial Authority
3 Cracks in Incorruptibility and the Traveling Alms Collectors
4 Gender and the Spiritual Tax Collectors
5 Corpus Christi Arches and Authority in Mexico City
6 Triumphal Arches and Centurions in the Indigenous–Spanish Festival Economy
Conclusion: From Indigenous Miracles to Miracles of the Poor
Appendix: Order of Appearance of Corpus Christi Arches, Mexico City, 1777–1780, from Cathedral Side Door to Front Door
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“Edward Osowski focuses on a regional set of Nahua Constantines, who, with their conversionary moments generations behind them, sought to lead by example—through patronage, public demonstrations of devotion around chosen holy images, ritual good works and alms-collection schemes, and a jealous guardianship of indigenous roles in the pious parading of Christian membership and privilege. Osowski’s study banishes older views of a uniformly disoriented native society, trudging drunk and leaderless into the colonial new order, duped into demeaning collaboration and the limits of social-climbing. His stress upon a self-legitimizing indigenous nobility, and upon the calculated and instrumental aims of these protagonists, raises vital questions that ought to stimulate new lines of research into Nahua Christian expression, not least those exploring what such vibrant religious membership and shared devotions included, and what they felt like to a widening and multi-ethnic body of participants." —Kenneth Mills, University of Toronto, and co-editor of Colonial Latin America: A Documentary History