Indigenous Calligraphers and Typographers in the New Spain

被引:0
|
作者
Garone Gravier, Marina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Inst Bibliograf, Bibliol, Mexico City, DF, Mexico
来源
关键词
calligraphers; book history; indigenous; Mexico; typographers;
D O I
10.5209/rev_RGID.2013.v23.n2.43138
中图分类号
G25 [图书馆学、图书馆事业]; G35 [情报学、情报工作];
学科分类号
1205 ; 120501 ;
摘要
The references about the use of the Latin alphabet by the Native Americans can be found in many books that address the contact and conquest of the New World, from the chronicles of religious orders to the various philological works produced by monks and priests. All of them express, in some way, that the alphabetic system, even if it transformed the original meaning of the Indian texts, worked in favor of the native communities to the extent that these social actors soon made effective use of the new registration system. In the case of the New Spain, indigenous participation in book production was clearly manifested in many ways: not only by their labor as informants, translators and correctors of the missionaries' works, but also because they participated activelly in the visual design and material production of colonial manuscripts and printed books. Taking the phenomenon mentioned above into cosideration, this paper will analyze the role played by calligraphers and typographers in shaping the indigenous written records in alphabetical model, a work that allowed bookish shape of a new American Indian written tradition. To address this issue, first I will do a brief description of calligraphic and typographic training received by Mexican Indians after the American conquest. Secondly, I will give and discuss some concrete examples of manuscripts and printed books where indigenous people participated and, finally, I will introduce a brief summary of the lexicon relative to the written and the book universe, present in the vocabularies for indigenous languages.
引用
收藏
页码:315 / 332
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The "Little Doctrine" and Indigenous Catechesis in New Spain
    Burkhart, Louise M.
    [J]. HAHR-HISPANIC AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 2014, 94 (02): : 167 - 206
  • [2] Passion Miracles and Indigenous Historical Memory in New Spain
    Osowski, Edward W.
    [J]. HAHR-HISPANIC AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 2008, 88 (04): : 607 - 638
  • [3] The indigenous nobility in New Spain: between tradition and novelty
    Luis de Raus, Jose
    Olko, Justyna
    Cruz Pazos, Patricia
    [J]. REVISTA ESPANOLA DE ANTROPOLOGIA AMERICANA, 2011, 41 (02): : 435 - 435
  • [4] Bountiful Deserts: Sustaining Indigenous Worlds in Northern New Spain
    Zavala, Ana Luz Ramirez
    Radding, Cynthia
    [J]. HAHR-HISPANIC AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 2023, 103 (04): : 708 - 709
  • [5] Bountiful Deserts: Sustaining Indigenous Worlds in Northern New Spain
    Hunt, Marjorie
    Radding, Cynthia
    [J]. CULTURAL GEOGRAPHIES, 2024, 31 (03) : 439 - 440
  • [6] Indigenous currency and its uses in New Spain in the XVIth century
    Berdan, FF
    [J]. AMERICAS, 2000, 57 (01): : 153 - 154
  • [7] THE "GAME"OF THE FLIERS: INDIGENOUS ADAPTATION AND FESTIVE LIFE IN THE NEW SPAIN
    Hill, Matthew J. K.
    [J]. CHASQUI-REVISTA DE LITERATURA LATINOAMERICANA, 2016, 45 (01): : 147 - 161
  • [8] INDIGENOUS REBELLIONS IN NORTHERN NEW SPAIN - SPANISH - GALAVIZDECAPDEVIELLE,E
    FAULK, OB
    [J]. HISPANIC AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 1969, 49 (03) : 536 - 537
  • [9] Bountiful Deserts: Sustaining Indigenous Worlds in Northern New Spain
    Mathews, Sandra
    Radding, Cynthia
    [J]. WESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY, 2024, 55 (01) : 61 - 62
  • [10] The Motions Beneath: Indigenous Migrants of the Urban Frontier of New Spain
    Deeds, Susan M.
    [J]. ETHNOHISTORY, 2019, 66 (04) : 745 - 747