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Maya ideologies of the sacred : the transfiguration of space in colonial Yucatan / Amara Solari.

Penn Museum Library F1435.3.M53 S65 2013
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Solari, Amara, 1978- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Franciscans.
Mayas--Missions--Mexico--Yucatán (State)--History.
Mayas.
Mayas--Mexico--Yucatán (State)--Religion.
Franciscans--Missions--Mexico--Yucatán (State)--History.
Maya architecture--Mexico--Yucatán (State).
Maya architecture.
Colonies.
Administration.
Sacred space.
History.
Missions.
Religion.
Mayas--Missions.
Mexico--Yucatán (State).
Franciscan architecture--Mexico--Yucatán (State).
Franciscan architecture.
Sacred space--Mexico--Yucatán (State)--History.
Yucatán (Mexico : State)--Religious life and customs.
Yucatán (Mexico : State).
Spain--Colonies--America--Administration.
Spain.
Yucatán (Mexico : State)--Antiquities.
America.
Mexico.
Physical Description:
xi, 212 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 27 cm
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Austin : University of Texas Press, 2013.
Summary:
As Spaniards built colonies in the New World, men of the cloth saw within ancient ruins and inhabited native towns great potential for easing the colonization effort. In the Yucatan, which is the locus of this study, Franciscan friars seized upon the opportunity to "conquer" Maya places for Christianity. Their practice of remaking a Maya town into a Christian town-often building their church on the very foundations of an ancient sacred site-represented the absolute triumph of their religion, the ultimate defeat of the pagan demonic forces by the true faith. This book addresses the Franciscan evangelical campaign of sixteenth-century Yucatan and investigates how Maya conceptions of space, landscape, and history influenced the conversion strategies adopted by the friars. Amara Solari analyzes colonial manuscripts written in Yucatec Mayan to discern how Maya communities conceived of land (and more abstractly, space) and how they encoded space with cultural significance. She demonstrates how these indigenous understandings of space and its history, a locales "spatial biography," made the transference of sacrality possible. Using the Maya city of Itzmal as a case study, Solari examines the process of transferring sacrality and healing abilities from the Maya deity Itzamnaaj to a numinous statue of the Virgin Mary. She also reveals how the hybrid religious ideology that evolved allowed the native Maya population to subvert colonial political and religious programs and maintain community identity in the early years of the colonial period. Book jacket.
Contents:
Chapter 1 Spatial Conquests of the Yucatan Peninsula 1
Chapter 2 The Ritualized Landscape of Pre-Columbian Itzmal 27
Chapter 3 Animated Landscapes in Text and Image 59
Chapter 4 Cartographic Narrative and Maya Spatial Ideologies in Literature 81
Chapter 5 Circular Cosmologies and Colonial Maya Cartographic Practice 99
Chapter 6 The Transfiguration of Colonial Itzmal 127.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-203) and index.
ISBN:
9780292744943
0292744943
OCLC:
811337430

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