Mexica Movement
Frances Karttunen
karttu at NANTUCKET.NET
Sat Apr 15 11:32:52 UTC 2006
I certainly agree with many points in your paper, but I also think your
bibliography needs expansion, and the place to start would be with
James Lockhart's big book, The Nahuas After the Conquest.
While the movement you describe has obvious appeal to many people of
Mexican heritage in both the USA and Mexico, I have wondered about the
single-minded focus on the Uto-Aztecan peoples and in particular the
Aztecs. Doesn't this disenfranchise (yet again) the many other
indigenous peoples of Mexico? How can the Mixtec farm workers up and
down the west coast of the USA and those of various Mayan ethnic groups
resident in Florida, to cite but two examples, relate to a Mexica
movement?
As for the million or so Nahuatl-speaking people of today, isn't
appropriating their name and aspects of their language-and-culture
complex also an act of cultural imperialism imposed on them by people
they don't recognize as fellow macehualtin/nahuatlatohqueh?
Also, it seems that you are equating "Mexican" and "Central American"
in your paper, but most people use "Central America" to refer to the
countries south of Mexico through Panama. The term
"Meso-America"--while literally meaning the same thing--has been used
for a long time to refer to the well-defined culture area ranging from
northern Mexico through El Salvador and Nicaragua. Within this ancient
area, into which the Nahuah were late arrivals, there are many
unrelated indigenous languages but many shared cultural features.
Frances Karttunen
On Apr 14, 2006, at 7:15 PM, David Becraft wrote:
> I just finished a research paper for my Anthropology 301 class with
> Dr. Anne Chambers of Southern Oregon University. Please review it and
> critique it at:
> http://panchobecraft.blogspot.com/
>
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