Mexican History is a comprehensive and innovative primary source reader in Mexican history from the pre-Columbian past to the neoliberal present. Chronologically organized chapters facilitate the book's assimilation into most course syllabi. Its selection of documents thoughtfully conveys enduring themes of Mexican history (land and labor, indigenous people, religion, and state formation) while also incorporating recent advances in scholarly research on the frontier, urban life, popular culture, race and ethnicity, and gender. Student-friendly pedagogical features include contextual…mehr
Mexican History is a comprehensive and innovative primary source reader in Mexican history from the pre-Columbian past to the neoliberal present. Chronologically organized chapters facilitate the book's assimilation into most course syllabi. Its selection of documents thoughtfully conveys enduring themes of Mexican history (land and labor, indigenous people, religion, and state formation) while also incorporating recent advances in scholarly research on the frontier, urban life, popular culture, race and ethnicity, and gender. Student-friendly pedagogical features include contextual introductions to each chapter and each reading, lists of key terms and related sources, and guides to recommended readings and Web-based resources.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Part 1. Pre-Columbian Mexico (200-1519) 1. Copn and Teotihuacan: Shared Culture Across a Great Distance (200-900 ce) Image 1.1 Temple of Quetzalcoatl, Teotihuacan, detail showing talud-tablero and the rain god Image 1.2 Painted vessel from the Margarita tomb, Copn, in the Teotihuacan style 2. The Popol Vuh (the Community Book): The Mythic Origins of the Quich Maya (1554-1558) 3. Mayan Royalty and Writing (c. 667 ce) Image 3.1 Mayan king Hanab-Pakals sarcophagus lid 4. The Origin of the Nahuas and the Birth of the Fifth Sun (1596) 5. A Treasury of Mexica Power and Gender (c. 1541-1542) Image 5.1 Tribute list from Tochtepec Image 5.2 Midwife and newborn babies Image 5.3 Marriage ceremony 6. Markets and Temples in the City of Tenochtitlan (1519) 7. The Mixtec Map of San Pedro Teozacoalco (1580) Image 7.1 The Mixtec map of San Pedro Teozacoalco 8. The Urban Zoning of Maya Social Class in the Yucatn (1566) 9. The Nomadic Seris of the Northern Desert (1645) Part 2. The Spanish Conquest and Christian Conversion (1519-1610) 10. Hernn Corts and Moteucoma Meet, According to a Spanish Conqueror (1568) 11. Moteucoma and Hernn Corts Meet, According to a Nahua Codex (c. 1555) 12. The Nahua Interpreter Malintzin Translates for Corts and Moteucoma (1580) Image 12.1 Malintzin translates for Corts and Moteucoma 13. Acazitli of Tlalmanalco: Nahua Conqueror on the Mesoamerican Frontier (1541) 14. Poetic Attempts to Justify the Conquest of Acoma, New Mexico (1610) 15. The Tlaxcaltecas Stage a Christian Pageant Like Heaven on Earth (1538) 16. The Spiritual Conquest: The Trial of Don Carlos Chichimecatecotl of Texcoco (1539) 17. The Inquisition Seizes Don Carloss Estate: The Oztoticpac Map (1540) Image 17.1 The Oztoticpac lands map of 1540 18. Father Fernndez Attempts to Convert the Seris of Sonora Single-handedly (1679) Part 3. The Consolidation of Colonial Government (1605-1692) 19. The Silver Mining City of Zacatecas (1605) 20.
Part 1. Pre-Columbian Mexico (200-1519) 1. Copn and Teotihuacan: Shared Culture Across a Great Distance (200-900 ce) Image 1.1 Temple of Quetzalcoatl, Teotihuacan, detail showing talud-tablero and the rain god Image 1.2 Painted vessel from the Margarita tomb, Copn, in the Teotihuacan style 2. The Popol Vuh (the Community Book): The Mythic Origins of the Quich Maya (1554-1558) 3. Mayan Royalty and Writing (c. 667 ce) Image 3.1 Mayan king Hanab-Pakals sarcophagus lid 4. The Origin of the Nahuas and the Birth of the Fifth Sun (1596) 5. A Treasury of Mexica Power and Gender (c. 1541-1542) Image 5.1 Tribute list from Tochtepec Image 5.2 Midwife and newborn babies Image 5.3 Marriage ceremony 6. Markets and Temples in the City of Tenochtitlan (1519) 7. The Mixtec Map of San Pedro Teozacoalco (1580) Image 7.1 The Mixtec map of San Pedro Teozacoalco 8. The Urban Zoning of Maya Social Class in the Yucatn (1566) 9. The Nomadic Seris of the Northern Desert (1645) Part 2. The Spanish Conquest and Christian Conversion (1519-1610) 10. Hernn Corts and Moteucoma Meet, According to a Spanish Conqueror (1568) 11. Moteucoma and Hernn Corts Meet, According to a Nahua Codex (c. 1555) 12. The Nahua Interpreter Malintzin Translates for Corts and Moteucoma (1580) Image 12.1 Malintzin translates for Corts and Moteucoma 13. Acazitli of Tlalmanalco: Nahua Conqueror on the Mesoamerican Frontier (1541) 14. Poetic Attempts to Justify the Conquest of Acoma, New Mexico (1610) 15. The Tlaxcaltecas Stage a Christian Pageant Like Heaven on Earth (1538) 16. The Spiritual Conquest: The Trial of Don Carlos Chichimecatecotl of Texcoco (1539) 17. The Inquisition Seizes Don Carloss Estate: The Oztoticpac Map (1540) Image 17.1 The Oztoticpac lands map of 1540 18. Father Fernndez Attempts to Convert the Seris of Sonora Single-handedly (1679) Part 3. The Consolidation of Colonial Government (1605-1692) 19. The Silver Mining City of Zacatecas (1605) 20.
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