Nahuatl scholarship
Stephanie Wood
swood at uoregon.edu
Mon Oct 30 18:41:17 UTC 2006
Nahuat-L listeros,
I also thank Michael for his good suggestions. There is so much to
be done, and I am excited about the research directions of the Leiden
group. Regarding Michael's first point, one could say that some
progress is being made in this area. I found some testaments in
parish archives, and Cati Pizzigoni's work included some testaments
from some of these more local archives. Miriam Melton-Villanueva is
also working with a cache of testaments which, I believe, are not
from a national archive. What is exciting, too, about Miriam's
sources are how "late" some of them are -- early 19th c. We have
often sought nineteenth-century, mundane Nahuatl records, but without
much success so far. Getting to more local archives should help.
Another great development is the work of the late Luis Reyes García's
students. Lidia Gómez García and Raúl Macuil Martínez, for instance,
are visiting local archives in the states of Puebla and Tlaxcala, and
are busy digitizing manuscripts in Nahuatl that they find. These are
very gradually being made available through the Early Nahuatl Virtual
Library Project that we are developing at the Wired Humanities
Project at the University of Oregon. Transcriptions and translations
will come in time. (We have no grant for this project, yet --
suggestions are welcomed!)
We are also digitizing and developing studies of pictorial
manuscripts in the Mapas Project. For this project, we have just
landed an NEH grant to develop four of the mapas. The Mapas Project
is particularly interdisciplinary, with linguists and art historians
assisting, and while the sources are colonial, we are bringing in
ethnographic and archaeological information to help us understand the
content of the manuscripts. Nahuas in John Sullivan's courses at
IDIEZ have also agreed to work on some of the transcriptions and
translations.
Best wishes,
Stephanie Wood
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