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Yucatan at the Time of the Spanish Encounter - Relacion de Las Cosas de Yucatan (Paperback, Bilingual ed.)
Loot Price: R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
You Save: R72
(14%)
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Yucatan at the Time of the Spanish Encounter - Relacion de Las Cosas de Yucatan (Paperback, Bilingual ed.)
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List price R501
Loot Price R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
You Save R72 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In an ambitious new translation of Diego de Landa's Account of the
Things of Yucatan (Relacion de las cosas de Yucatan), the editor
revises and updates the language for the contemporary reader of
English. In the process he captures the narrative power and
intensity, the nuances and subtleties of meaning and the emotions
of Landa's history of Yucatan at the time of Spanish arrival,
conquest, and settlement of the peninsula. Landa's observations
speak of his intellectual curiosity about and of his respect for
the First Peoples of Yucatan. For instance, he credits the vast
architectural legacy, from the pyramids to the monumental
ceremonial centers, to the Mayas' ancestors, and not other
"nations." At the same time, Landa surmises that the Maya of
centuries past were healthier, better fed, and enjoyed a more
diverse diet compared to the Maya of his time. This has only
recently been confirmed through the analysis of human remains
dating back to the Classic Maya period. These intellectual
insights, however, stand in sharp contrast with Landa's conviction
that the devil visited Yucatan, which led him to establish an
Inquisition, for which he was denounced and made to defend himself
before the Council of the Indies in Spain. This episode remains
arguably the darkest one in Yucatan's post-Hispanic history. These
beliefs about the presence of the devil, however, as the Salem
witch trials a century later demonstrate, were common throughout
the world at the time. Now, for the first time, both a new
English-language translation and Landa's original Spanish-language
manuscript are published in the same volume, offering readers the
opportunity to read the text in both English and Spanish. This is
the timeless historical work that constitutes the foundation of our
understanding of the ambivalence that characterizes the
co-existence of the Maya and Spaniards in Yucatan, an ambivalence
that in many ways continues to the present day.
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