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Coded Encounters : Writing, Gender and Ethnicity in Colonial Latin America

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Much has been written about the ways in which Columbus's discovery of America began a process of inventing a new world in European consciousness.

But far less has been published about those on the margins of the dominant European discourse--Amerindians, Africans, and women--whose experience is reflected in documents written during the early years of European rule in Latin America.

This volume brings together essays by leading scholars of colonial Latin America who address a series of topics relating to both the marginal and European-dominant discourses.

The book is divided into five sections: Representing the New World, The Institutionalization of the Colony, Amerindian Texts, Women in Colonial Latin America, and The Later Colony and the Caribbean Experience.

The essays range from a consideration of Amerindian codes of mapmaking to the career of a transvestite nun, from confessional sin lists used by priests to examine the transgressions of their American charges to a new view of colonial women's lives based on birth records, dowry agreements, and wills.

Contributors include Walter Mignolo, Maureen Ahern, Abel Alves, Rolena Adorno, Lucia Helena Santiago Costigan, Pedro Lasarte, Raquel Chang-Rodriguez, Regina Harrison, Asuncion Lavrin, Stephanie Merrim, Nina M.

Scott, Antonio Carreno, Julie Greer Johnson, Karen Stolley, and Antonio Benitez-Rojo.

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Product Details
0870238868 / 9780870238864
Paperback / softback
306.4
31/03/1994
United States
304 pages, 29 illustrations
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More