Mexican Calendar Girls

Mexican Calendar Girls
Author: Angela Villalba
Publisher: Chronicle Books
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2006-08-24
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9780811853156

A truly popular art form, the glamorous paintings of Mexican calendar girls have a long and fascinating historyas advertisements, enticements, and emblems of Mexican cultural heritage and pride. The result of years of research, this playful and informative book reproduces more than 150 vibrantly colorful calendar images, plus archival photographs and other materials that illuminate their creation. A fully bilingual text gives an overview of the calendars' social and cultural history, along with biographies of the talented artists who created them. Also including a foreword by the renowned Mexican cultural critic Carlos Monsivis, Mexican Calendar Girls presents this popular and delightful art as never before.

Time, History, and Belief in Aztec and Colonial Mexico

Time, History, and Belief in Aztec and Colonial Mexico
Author: Ross Hassig
Publisher: Univ of TX + ORM
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2013-12-18
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0292797958

This illuminating study offers a radical new understanding of how the Aztecs and other Mesoamerican societies conceived of time and history. Based on their enormously complex calendars that recorded cycles of many kinds, the Aztecs and other ancient Mesoamerican civilizations are generally believed to have had a cyclical, rather than linear, conception of time and history. This boldly revisionist book challenges that understanding. Ross Hassig offers convincing evidence that for the Aztecs time was predominantly linear, that it was manipulated by the state as a means of controlling a dispersed tribute empire, and that the Conquest cut off state control and severed the unity of the calendar, leaving only the lesser cycles. From these, he asserts, we have inadequately reconstructed the pre-Columbian calendar and so misunderstood the Aztec conception of time and history. Hassig first presents the traditional explanation of the Aztec calendrical system and its ideological functions and then marshals contrary evidence to argue that the Aztec elite deliberately used calendars and timekeeping to achieve practical political ends. He further traces how the Conquest played out in the temporal realm as Spanish conceptions of time partially displaced the Aztec ones.

Mexican Archaeology

Mexican Archaeology
Author: Thomas Athol Joyce
Publisher:
Total Pages: 472
Release: 1914
Genre: Archaeology
ISBN:

With many ill. and a map