Edgar: doublets, bifrasismos, difrasismos
Geoff Davis
mixcoatl at GMAIL.COM
Thu Sep 2 23:56:08 UTC 2004
On Thu, 2 Sep 2004 18:20:08 -0500, Mark David Morris
<mdmorris at indiana.edu> wrote:
> Regarding in atl, in tlachinolli, it may also be important
> to bear in mind that tlachinolli most directly refers to the
> kind of burning done in agricultural fields. What I'm
> suggesting is that war was being metaphorically equated
> to an agricultural cycle.
I wasn't aware of the correlation between tlachinolli and
field burning, which may just go to show my inexperience.
I had, though, considered the possibility that there was an
agricultural significance to the terminology, but hadn't the
knowledge to prove it beyond "just a hunch".
Principally, I drew my conclusion from the idea that what
I was reading was a juxtaposing of elements that represented,
at some level, the wet and dry seasons of Mexico.
It seems to me this has significant parallel with the role of
destruction-balance (war?) in Hinduism, albeit in a different
context.
I could, of course, be totally off base -- on account of being
still a newbie. Are there others who also see this correlation?
Kind regards,
-Geoff
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