The Aztec Image in Western Thought
Autor Benjamin Keenen Limba Engleză Paperback – aug 1990
The great inquiry into the nature of Aztec civilization began at the very moment of its destruction in the name of the Spanish Crown and Church. The overwhelming discovery of a vast, luxurious overseas empire offering fresh evidence of the enormous diversity of customs and opinions among the nations of the earth expanded the imaginative as well as the geographic horizons of Renaissance Europe.
In The Aztec Image, Benjamin Keen explores the shifting attitudes and focus of the scores of historians, philosophers, scientists, and men of letters and the arts who dealt with the Aztec theme in the four and a half centuries after the conquest of Mexico. From that time to the present, the world of the ancient Aztecs has been a subject of compelling interest and controversy in the West. Keen explains how each new view continuously corrected and developed, the Western conception of Aztec civilization. He relates prevailing ideas about the Aztecs to the broad socioeconomic, political, and ideological patterns of the age, as well as to the contemporary state of knowledge about ancient Mexico. A comprehensive work of historiography, Keen's book is the first to encompass the sweep of Western thought on the Aztecs from Cortes to the present.
In The Aztec Image, Benjamin Keen explores the shifting attitudes and focus of the scores of historians, philosophers, scientists, and men of letters and the arts who dealt with the Aztec theme in the four and a half centuries after the conquest of Mexico. From that time to the present, the world of the ancient Aztecs has been a subject of compelling interest and controversy in the West. Keen explains how each new view continuously corrected and developed, the Western conception of Aztec civilization. He relates prevailing ideas about the Aztecs to the broad socioeconomic, political, and ideological patterns of the age, as well as to the contemporary state of knowledge about ancient Mexico. A comprehensive work of historiography, Keen's book is the first to encompass the sweep of Western thought on the Aztecs from Cortes to the present.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780813515724
ISBN-10: 0813515726
Pagini: 686
Ilustrații: 1
Dimensiuni: 152 x 235 x 46 mm
Greutate: 0.99 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press
ISBN-10: 0813515726
Pagini: 686
Ilustrații: 1
Dimensiuni: 152 x 235 x 46 mm
Greutate: 0.99 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press
Notă biografică
BENJAMIN KEEN is Professor Emeritus of Latin American history at Northern Illinois University. He is the author of David Curtis De Forest and the Revolution of Buenos Aires among other books.
Cuprins
Foreword
1. The People of the Sun
2. The Aztec World View
3. Europe Discovers the Aztecs
4. The Aztecs and the Great Debate: I
5. The Aztecs and the Great Debate: II
6. The Aztecs in Late Renaissance Thought
7. The Baroque Vision of the Aztecs
8. The Eyes of Reason: I
9. The Eyes of Reason: II
10. The Aztecs Transfigured: I
11. The Aztecs Transfigured: II
12. Montezuma's Dinner
13. Farewell to Fantasy: From Orozco y Berra to Seler
14. The Return of Cuauhtemoc
15. The Plumed Serpent
Notes
Index
1. The People of the Sun
2. The Aztec World View
3. Europe Discovers the Aztecs
4. The Aztecs and the Great Debate: I
5. The Aztecs and the Great Debate: II
6. The Aztecs in Late Renaissance Thought
7. The Baroque Vision of the Aztecs
8. The Eyes of Reason: I
9. The Eyes of Reason: II
10. The Aztecs Transfigured: I
11. The Aztecs Transfigured: II
12. Montezuma's Dinner
13. Farewell to Fantasy: From Orozco y Berra to Seler
14. The Return of Cuauhtemoc
15. The Plumed Serpent
Notes
Index
Descriere
The great inquiry into the nature of Aztec civilization began at the very moment of its destruction in the name of the Spanish Crown and Church. The overwhelming discovery of a vast, luxurious overseas empire offering fresh evidence of the enormous diversity of customs and opinions among the nations of the earth expanded the imaginative as well as the geographic horizons of Renaissance Europe. In The Aztec Image, Benjamin Keen explores the shifting attitudes and focus of the scores of historians, philosophers, scientists, and men of letters and the arts who dealt with the Aztec theme in the four and a half centuries after the conquest of Mexico.