Contemporary Nahua Oral Tradition and Colonial Maps

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18441/ind.v36i2.159-194

Keywords:

oral tradition, indigenous peoples, maps, lienzos, Nahua, Mexico

Abstract

The present work analyzes the transmission of the oral tradition of the indigenous peoples during the colonial and contemporary period and how it was documented in manuscripts, canvases, maps, and genealogies. In these documents, a part of the vision of the Mesoamerican world was expressed: the ritual life, the sacred discourses, the cult of the ancestors and the gods that live in the areas surrounding the towns and in the hills that are considered sacred. One of the main premises that will guide this work is this: the indigenous communities are entities that produce knowledge, a part of which we can see documented in their documentation. The community’s oral narrative is what guides the tlacuiloque (‘scribes’) in the representation of their history.

Published

2019-12-17

Issue

Section

Articles