Death and Dying in Colonial Spanish America
288 pages, 6 x 9
Hardcover
Release Date:01 Dec 2011
ISBN:9780816529759
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Death and Dying in Colonial Spanish America

The University of Arizona Press
When the Spanish colonized the Americas, they brought many cultural beliefs and practices with them, not the least of which involved death and dying. The essays in this volume explore the resulting intersections of cultures through recent scholarship related to death and dying in colonial Spanish America between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. The authors address such important questions as: What were the relationships between the worlds of the living and the dead? How were these relationships sustained not just through religious dogma and rituals but also through everyday practices? How was unnatural death defined within different population strata? How did demographic and cultural changes affect mourning?

The variety of sources uncovered in the authors’ original archival research suggests the wide diversity of topics and approaches they employ: Nahua annals, Spanish chronicles, Inquisition case records, documents on land disputes, sermons, images, and death registers. Geographically, the range of research focuses on the viceroyalties of New Spain, Peru, and New Granada.

The resulting records—both documentary and archaeological—offer us a variety of vantage points from which to view each of these cultural groups as they came into contact with others. Much less tied to modern national boundaries or old imperial ones, the many facets of the new historical research exploring the topic of death demonstrate that no attitudes or practices can be considered either “Western” or universal.
These contributors ground their analysis on an impressive list of sources and in spite of their thematic and methodological diversity, these pieces are connected through common threads. The volume offers new insights on the history of death in colonial Peru and Mexico, a topic only a few authors have addressed in English in a systematic manner.'—Javier Villa-Flores, author of Dangerous Speech: A Social History of Blasphemy in Colonial Mexico
Martina Will is an independent scholar and author of Death and Dying in New Mexico. Miruna Achim is an associate professor of humanities at the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Cuajimalpa in Mexico City. She is the author of Lagartijas medicinales: Remedios americanos y debates ilustrados.
From the Here to the Hereafter: An Introduction to Death and Dying
Martina Will and Miruna Achim
1 Noble Nahuas, Faith, and Death: How the Indigenous Elite of the Colonial Puebla-Tlaxcala Valley Prepared to Perish
Erika Hosselkus
2 Reading the (Dead) Body: Histories of Suicide in New Spain
Zeb Tortorici
3 The Autopsy of Fray García Guerra: Corporal Meanings in Seventeenth-Century Mexico
Miruna Achim
4 The Death of the Monarch as Colonial Sacrament
James Flaks
5 Exemplary Punishment in Colonial Lima: The 1639 Auto de Fe
Ana Schaposchnik
6 Angelic Death and Sacrifice in Early Modern Hispanic America
Andrew Redden
7 Medicine and the Dead: Conflicts over Burial Reform and Piety in Lima, 1808–1850
Adam Warren

Notes
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About the Contributors
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