Words & worlds turned around : indigenous Christianities in colonial Latin America.
Other Authors: | |
---|---|
Format: | Ouvrage |
Language: | Anglais |
Published: |
Boulder :
University Press of Colorado,
2017.
|
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Performing the Zaachila word : the Dominican invention of Zapotec Christianity / David Tavárez
- Towards a deconstruction of the notion of Nahua "confession" / Julia Madajczak
- Precontact indigenous concepts in Christian translations : the terminology of sin and confession in early colonial Quechua texts / Gregory Haimovich
- A sixteenth-century priest's field notes among the highland Maya : Proto-theologia as vade mecum / Garry Sparks and Frauke Sachse
- International collaborations in translation : the European promise of militant Christianity for the Tupinamba of Portuguese America, 1550s-1613 / M. Kittiya Lee
- The Nahua story of Judas : indigenous agency and loci of meaning / Justyna Olko
- A Nahua Christian talks back : Fabián de Aquino's antichrist dramas as autoethnography / Ben Leeming
- Sin, shame, and sexuality : Franciscan obsessions and Maya humor in the Calepino de Motul Dictionary, 1573-1588 / John F. Chuchiak, IV
- To make Christianity fit : the process of Christianization from an Andean perspective / Claudia Brosseder
- Predictions and portents of doomsday in European, Nahuatl, and Maya texts / Mark Z. Christensen
- The value of el costumbre and Christianity in the discourse of Nahua : catechists from the Huasteca region in Veracruz, Mexico / Abelardo de la Cruz.