Nahua Workshop at U of Maryland, May 1-2, 2009
John Sullivan, Ph.D.
idiez at me.com
Thu Feb 26 15:54:10 UTC 2009
Listeros,
> You are cordially invited to attend the first annual Nahuatl
> Workshop entitled, "Issues in Nahua Identity and Language: Past and
> Present," Friday, May 1 - Saturday, May 2. The workshop is sponsored
> by the Latin American Studies Center of the University of Maryland,
> College Park, MD.
Nahua Workshop
University of Maryland, College Park
Friday, May 1- Saturday, May 2, 2009
Issues in Nahua Identity and Language: Past and Present
This interdisciplinary workshop will explore issues of identity and
language among Nahuatl-speaking peoples from both historical and
contemporary perspectives. A group of scholars from various
disciplines will come together to present and discuss each other’s
current research. Topics will include (but are not limited to):
relationships between language and identity; problems of translation;
interpretations of colonial narratives; and ethnography in
contemporary Nahua communities.
Schedule
Friday, May 1
2:00-3:00 pm: Jane Hill / Keynote address (University of Arizona)
Uto-Aztecan as a Mesoamerican Language Family: Implications for
Understanding Aztecan and the Nahua
3:00 – 4:00 pm: Jacqueline Messing (LASC Fellow)
Identity and Narrative in Colonial Tlaxcala, Mexico
4:00 – 5:00 pm: Jonathan Amith
The practice and politics of Nahuatl standardization: Local and
national identity in conflict
Dinner
Saturday, May 2
9:00-10:00 am: Jim Maffie (LASC Fellow)
In Huehue Tlamanitiliztli and la Verdad: Philosophical Language and
Identity in Friar Bernardino de Sahagún’s Colloquios y doctrina
chistiana
10:00-11:00 am: Berenice Alcantra Rojas (Universidad Nacional Autónoma
de México)
Authorship and Translation in Doctrinal Nahuatl Texts from the
Colonial Period.
11:00-12:00 am: John Sullivan (University of Zacatecas)
The IDIEZ Project: Countering the Deculturization of Nahuas at Mexican
Universities
12:00-1:00 pm: Alan Sandstrom & Pamela Sandstrom (Indiana University-
Purdue)
Huastecan Nahua Ethnic Identity, Processes of Globalization, and the
Protestant Invasion
Lunch & farewell
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