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The Aztec Myths

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The essential guide to the world of Aztec mythology, based on Nahuatl-language sources that challenge the colonial history passed down to us by the Spanish.

From their remote origins as migrating tribes to their rise as builders of empire, the Aztecs were among the most dynamic and feared peoples of ancient Mexico, with a belief system that was one of the most complex and vital in the ancient world. Historian Camilla Townsend returns to the original tales, told at the fireside by generations of Indigenous Nahuatl speakers. Along the way, she deals with human sacrifice, the raising of great temples, and the troubling legacy of the Spanish conquest.

Few cultures are generally understood to have been so controlled by their religion as the Aztecs, and few religions are envisioned as being as violent and celebratory of death as theirs. In this introduction to the Aztec myths, Townsend draws from sixteenth-century historical annals and songs written down by Nahuatl-speaking peoples, now known as the Aztecs, in their own language to counter this narrative, inherited from the conquering Spaniards. In doing so, she reveals a rich tapestry of mythic tradition that defies modern expectations.

Townsend retells stories ranging from the creation of the world, revealing the Aztec cosmological vision of nature and the divine, to legends of the Aztecs' own past that show how they understood the foundation of their state and the course of their wars. She considers the impact of colonial contact on the myths and demonstrates that Indigenous engagement with the new cultural customs introduced by the Europeans never entirely uprooted old ways of thinking.

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    • Booklist

      July 1, 2024
      Much of the public's knowledge about the Aztecs, including their name, is probably faulty. Historian Townsend, who focuses on Indigenous peoples of the Western Hemisphere, sets the record straight by drawing mainly upon Indigenous primary sources. The book starts with a revisionist history of the people who settled in the region now known as central Mexico. The next chapter focuses on these people's sense of time all the way back to creation; it also features stories about associated divine figures and principals. The following chapters cover the beginnings of human society, their migrations, and their developments; legends of political history; religious myths and practices, which extended to medicine and education; and myths that relate how these people adapted to a new world, including to Catholicism. Topical sidebars and red-tinted images dot the volume. End notes, an extensive bibliography, and an index conclude the book. The writing is scholarly but engaging. The stories flow one after the other, which makes this book more of an extended reading experience than a quick-reference tool. That experience is worth the time to rediscover more authentic "Aztecs."

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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