Image for The cost of courage in Aztec society: essays on Mesoamerican society and culture

The cost of courage in Aztec society: essays on Mesoamerican society and culture

See all formats and editions

How can men be brought to look steadily on the face of battle?

Tenochtitlan, the great city of the Aztecs, was the creation of war, and war was its dynamic.

In the title work of this compelling collection of essays, Inga Clendinnen reconstructs the sequence of experiences through which young Aztec warriors were brought to embrace their duty to their people, to their city, and to the forces that moved the world and the heavens.

Subsequent essays explore the survival of Yucatec Maya culture in the face of Spanish conquest and colonisation, the insidious corruption of an austere ideology translated into dangerously novel circumstances, and the multiple paths to the sacred constructed by 'defeated' populations in sixteenth-century Mexico.

The collection ends with Clendinnen's transition to the colonial history of her own country: a close and loving reading of the 1841 expedition journal of George Augustus Robinson, appointed 'Protector of Aborigines' in the Port Philip District of Australia.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£145.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1316087301 / 9781316087305
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
972.02
31/03/2010
England
English
209 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.