Testaments of Toluca
Understanding Indigenous Society through Nahuatl Wills
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Stanford University Press
Published:14th Dec '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book uncovers Nahuatl wills from 1652 to 1783, enhancing our understanding of indigenous life in central Mexico after Spanish contact, as explored in Testaments of Toluca.
The Testaments of Toluca presents a significant collection of Nahuatl wills dating from 1652 to 1783, offering invaluable insights into the lives of indigenous people in central Mexico following Spanish colonization. These testaments, written in Nahuatl, serve as crucial documents for understanding the everyday experiences and societal structures of the time. By focusing on a lesser-studied region, this work expands our comprehension of the evolution of indigenous culture and society during a transformative period.
This volume includes 98 wills that are meticulously transcribed and translated, each accompanied by commentary that sheds light on the testator's circumstances and highlights intriguing terminology. The introductory study provides a thorough analysis of the testamentary genre, marking a first in its examination of these documents. It summarizes their content, addressing various aspects such as gender roles, kinship dynamics, household structures, and land ownership.
Wills are inherently personal documents that reveal much about the local indigenous lifestyle in central Mexico, especially in the third century after Spanish contact. The Testaments of Toluca not only serves as a scholarly resource but also appeals to a wider audience interested in the human stories behind these legal texts. By bringing these voices to the forefront, the book enriches our understanding of the complexities of indigenous life during this era.
"Pizzigoni's edition is an important contribution to the study of the corpus of Nahuatl-language wills, and it suggest new directions for the future study of Nahuatl language and culture. The author's contribution is fundamental to what has been until today a neglected research topic in Nahuatl studies. The result is a specialized reference tool that will help to redefine socio-historical studies on the Nahuatl language and culture by guiding the research toward issues of material culture in Mexican colonial society." -- Raúl Marrero-Fente * Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
"The transcribed and translated primary documents are highly significant in their own right, but the extensive commentary transforms Testaments of Toluca into an important and accessible scholarly monograph." -- Robert Haskett * University of Oregon, author of Indigenous Rulers and Visions of Paradise *
"Testaments of Toluca is the first of its kind. The book is a critical edition of 98 Nahuatl-language wills in English translation from the Valley of Toluca, a region due west of Mexico City. The exegesis of the content of the testaments reveals surely as much as can be known about the individual testators and their lives. But just as important, Testaments of Toluca furnishes a meticulous analysis of the Nahuatl spoken by the dying . . . We can only be greatful that Pizzigoni has taken on the task of translating and commenting on thse hundreds of wills, which guarantees one of the most intensive and complete studies of Nahua life anywhere." -- Journal of Latin American Studies
"Pizzigoni follows the path established by S.L. Cline and Miguel Leon-Portilla in The Testaments of Culhuacan, but her corpus is far larger, later, and spread far more broadly over time and space. The broader temporal and geographic sweep allows us to see regional and subregional variations over time, deepening our appreciation of the variety and complexity of indigenous life in central Mexico." -- Leslie S. Offutt * Vassar College *
"This may be the single most significant volume of transcribed and translated testaments from colonial Latin America published to date. The quantity and quality of the material and its analysis make the book a treasure trove of information on late-colonial Nahua culture and society. Pizzigoni's presentation of the wills is meticulous, and her introduction and notes are extensive, thoughtful, and profoundly steeped in her knowledge of the field. Mesoamerican specialists will be delighted by-and grateful for-this contribution to the study of indigenous life during the colonial period, not only for the book's scholarly utility, but for its potential as a pedagogical tool at the advanced-undergraduate and graduate levels." -- Matthew Restall * Pennsylvania State University, author of The Maya World and editor of The Testaments of Ixi *
"Testaments of Toluca does for the eighteenth century in central Mexico what The Testaments of Culhuacan did earlier for the sixteenth: provide a basis for studying everyday indigenous life at the household level." -- Sarah Cline * UC Santa Barbara, author of Colonial Culhuacan and editor of The Testaments of Culhuacan *
ISBN: 9780804756075
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 962g
272 pages